Movie Review: The Zookeeper

Maybe there is a reason animals can’t really talk.

Check this out on my YouTube video review.

Before I start ripping into this execrable film, can I state that I for one am sick of Kevin James?  I can see him as possibly funny in stand up, but his film presence has just gotten overused and unpleasant.  He seems to always play the same role he pioneered in King of Queens: fat loser who through the machinations of fate has somehow managed to land one or more stunningly hot women.  I am not sure what dimension this is a viable possibility in, but for those of us who remain firmly ensconced in this reality it is actually a really annoying insult.  I don’t consider myself fat or a loser and I can’t pull that kind of action on my best day.  I’m stuck in the Bizarro world version where I get rejected constantly by the hot girls and seem to end up with the female Kevin James’s of the world.  Unfortunately, he seems patently unqualified for any other type of role (could you really see him as a villain of in a serious role?) so it looks like we will be inundated in future moronic rom-coms like this (mor-rom-coms?)

Which brings us to the Zookeeper.  Kevin James stars as a fat loser who works as a zookeeper and, for some ungodly reason, dates the stunning Leslie Bibb.  Her character, Stephanie, is in all regards a one dimensional, self centered, shallow bitch who rejects the most awkward marriage proposal of all time simply because he works as a zookeeper.  Apparently his lack of fitness or financial status are not really a concern.  Anyway, she crushes him in a manner so cruel that it is likely banned by Geneva convention.  Fast forward five years and he is now the lead zookeeper who works with the even more stunning Rosario Dawson, who is an “eagle enclosure expert” (does that seem a little specific to you?  How many jobs are there for such a person) with a heart of gold.  SPOILER ALERT: in a plot “twist” so cookie cutter I could smell ginger she turns out to be the girl he should have been into the whole time and ends the movie with.  I normally would hesitate to give away something that crucial to the story, but within the first 30 seconds of her being on the screen I said” Yep, she’s the one he’ll end up with.”

Josie and the PussycatsBy the way, I would like to point out that I am totally into Rosario Dawson.  She is super hot and can actually act.  What she can’t do is find a movie script that doesn’t suck.  Before doing the Zookeeper, she has starred in any amount of crud.  Her best movie to date (IMO) would have to be Unstoppable.  She was in Death Proof, but as much as a fan of grind house theater as I am I can’t really see it as a vehicle (haw) for advancing your acting career.  Percy Jackson sucked, as did Sin City, Clerks II, the Adventures of Pluto Nash, Josie and the Pussycats, Kill Shot, Eagle Eye, and Seven Pounds.  When she was younger she did Kids, which is a good movie in the “looking for something to watch while killing yourself” category, but other than that she needs to find a new agent.  (Josie and the Pussycats image courtesy of the comic book t shirt category)

Anyway, the guy states that he should leave working for the zoo in order to get a job that better appeals to the most shallow woman on the planet.  We also start getting subjected to some truly painful and hard to watch physical comedy.  At that point we find out that the animals can not only understand everything the humans are saying, but can speak perfect English too when they want to.  They decide they need to help Kevin ‘mate” with Stephanie and end up giving him dopey advice with dialog so cliche and hackneyed that it made me wish that  the animals only speak in barks and roars, as well as the humans in this flick.

So, romantic animal hijinks ensues.  Kevin James urinates into a potted plant at a fancy restaurant to “mark his territory” and doesn’t get arrested.  He more or less ruins his brother’s wedding and physically assaults the bride.  He ends up toe to toe with another ex boyfriend of Stephanie, played horribly by Joe Rogan.  I’ve seen Joe do some funny stuff, but the combination of his stiff delivery and the flaccid, depthless character he was handed made every scene with him in it feel like waiting on line at the DMV.  Kevin’s character does a Peter-Parker-in-Spiderman-3 transformation into a suave, sophisticated urbanite who sells exotic cars to the thousands of millionaire who reside in his city.  Stephanie plays the shallow, cultureless girlfriend to the hilt.  Somehow Ken Jeong managed to land a roll as the creepy reptile guy.  Is he going to have a bit part in every movie?  Eventually Kevin discovers he really loves Rosario Dawson but apparently forgets how to use a cell phone as the only way to intercept her on the way to her new job in Nairobi (no joke.  I guess they need an eagle cage there too) is a “hilarious” chase sequence in a stolen van.

Ok, the stars.  The animation for the animals was as good as you are likely to see.  One star.  There were a few funny moments.  One star.  Rosario Dawson was looking hot throughout the movie, and when she dressed up super hot.  One star.  While the animal dialog sucked, there were a couple voices that made me laugh (Adam Sandler and Sylvester Stallone, for the most part).  One star.  For the extremely brief amount of time he was on screen, Ken Jeong managed to amuse me and more or less stole every scene he was in.  Also he had a really cool car.  One star.  There was one scene where Kevin takes a gorilla out to TGI Fridays that was actually fun to watch, mainly because it was Kevin James cutting loose with a guy in a gorilla suit.  One star.  Total: six stars.

Now, like a tiger who has taken down an antelope and is ready to dig into the succulent entrails, I move to the black holes.  The animal dialog was as bad as human language can get.  Two black holes.  Painful to watch physical humor.  One black hole.  For some reason, the director of photography seemed to feel that Kevin James’s moon face was the most appealing thing in the movie and thus we are subjected to a lot of it.  Also, at one point we see him naked in a bathtub.  One black hole.  I’d like to give a black hole for every awkward moment that seemed to drag on forever (starting with the opening one), but will hold myself back.  Two black holes.  There was a completely irrelevant tangent that added nothing to the movie about Kevin’s character interacting with the high fashion world.  One black hole.  What extremely little character development the film had was extremely predictable.  One black hole.  In fact, the whole movie was excruciatingly predictable.  One black hole.  While pretty much all the animals except the gorilla annoyed me (there’s something you don’t say every day), the interaction between the two bears seemed to actually cause me physical pain.  One black hole.  Implied and described animal cruelty.  One black hole.  Joe Rogan bringing whatever momentum the film had to a screeching halt.  One black hole.  And two more black holes for just not being as much fun as it should have been.  Total: fourteen black holes.

So a total of eight black holes, a fairly miserable score but not as bad as the score I gave Green Lantern.  I can hear some of you asking if I might be being a little unfair to this film, critiquing it as an adult when it could possible just be a kids film.  Well, honestly that is one of the issues here.  This movie is a romantic comedy with talking animals.  It can’t really decide if it is going to be a kids film or an adult film.  Some of the dialog is too sophisticated and adult themed for kids, but some of it is just too dumb for grown ups.  It sits right in the middle, which means it will inevitably be relegated to the mediocrity archive of all time.  I’m actually curious as to where video shops (assuming any still exist) end up placing it. Honestly, don’t waste your time with this dog, unless you are one of those rare individuals who are enraptured by a Geico commercial.

I did experience something weird while watching this.  For the first time since I started these reviews I found myself wondering if I am really qualified to do them.  I am very rarely plagued by self doubt, but while I was praying for a film break or merciful death most of the audience was laughing their asses off.  I worried that maybe I am too out of touch with the general movie going audience, but I thought about it a lot on the way home and came to the conclusion that this is an example of cultural Darwinism.  If, for example, I were to open a retail shop that specialized in left handed scissors and the like, than I would not be surprised to find that most of my customers were left handed.  Likewise, if Hollywood sets out to create a film designed to appeal to the true idiots of our society, than I should not be surprised if I sit in a theater full of idiots.  I have found that when I go to the movies on $5 night the bar seems to be lowered considerably.  Odds are this movie will make a disappointingly large amount of money, leading us inevitably to the next bad rom-com staring Kevin James with yet another super hot girl.

 


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