Movie Reviews for Analyze That (Widescreen)

Analyze That (Widescreen)

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Movie Reviews of Analyze That (Widescreen)

Movie Review: LACKS THE SPARKLES OF FIRST, BUT FUNNY NONETHELESS
Summary: 4 Stars

It's not easy for a sequel to notch up to a super first movie. Analyze This was a marvellous comedy -- sharp, witty, and laugh-out-loud hilarious with just the right mix of smart lines and visual gags.

Analyze That suffers from the younger sibling syndrome. It's clear they scampered to recreate the infectious chemistry between De Niro and Crystal in the original, but it's just not as crisp. Too many moments look affected, and too often the story plods into unnecessary melodrama. A supposed big heist as the finale is a bit of a gyp, clinched by the very last scene which could really have been done without.

That said about the plot (or lack of it,) the hit and miss A-That also has its moments. I can think of at least 10 memorable one-liners, and there are patches in the movie when you feel light hearted, but the humor is rather dry. Lisa Kudrow squeezes in perhaps 6 minutes of airtime.

I adored the original. Based on reviews here, had pretty low expectations. It's not that bad, in its own right it is even a fair movie, but is not up to the task of matching up to its ripper of a prequel.

The soundtrack here is a bit better though. Some great R&B music (a genre I don't usually care much about) and the DVD has some interesting "Making of.." moments.

Recommended rental, not much more.


Movie Review: Quintesential Mafioso Comedy, With Laughs & Obviously Fans!
Summary: 4 Stars

The fact that Analyze That has as dreary average as three stars bemuses me. Ok I won't give it five but it's funny and entertaining, and it's got DeNiro. Billy Crystal has a habit of annoying me in many of his films, but here...he's good - 'your good you, your good!' - and DeNiro obviously frames this film.

After being put in prison Paul Vitti (DeNiro) claims insanity, a cry for Dr. Ben Sobel's (Crystal) help. Sobel agrees that he is insane and will take him in his custody, little does he know Vitti has a plan...

There are some truely hilarious moments, for example DeNiro walks downstairs in Crystal's house, Jewish majority, with just a dressing gound showing his privates. He then claims - 'what ya gotta do for some bacon round here eh?' Joe Viterelli is superb as the slow moving, slow thinking original mobster named 'Jelly' who really brings a spark to the show. Along with some other good performances from Lisa Kudrow and Brian Rogalski the film is set.

Honestly funny, disagree with the mass one/two star reviews.

Movie Review: "Analyze That" Review
Summary: 4 Stars

I don't see the deal with everyone saying it's a bad movie. It's not bad at all, infact I almost perfer Analyze That over Analyze This. If you haven't seen this, I'd reccomend atleast renting it. It doesn't have as many 'laughing out loud' parts, but it still is a great comedy.

Movie Review: Funnier than the first...
Summary: 4 Stars

one. I laughed so hard at this. If I had to say something negative it would probably be the ending was a little slow. but overall DeNiro and Crystal are a great combination!

Movie Review: Analyze That
Summary: 3 Stars

It's been three years since mobster Paul Vitti (Robert DeNiro) was rescued from an emotional time bomb by his therapist Ben Sobol (Billy Crystal). Now spending his days in prison, Vitti finds himself the target of numerous assassination attempts, and realizes that faking madness is his only way out of the slammer. Released into Sobol's custody, Vitti must assume a normal life, meaning jobs in car sales and restaurant greeting, and living with the Sobols (including Lisa Kudrow). Vitti finally finds success as a consultant for a mob television show called `Little Caesar,' but is more interested in finding out who's trying to kill him. Tagging along for the ride is Sobol, who is also attempting to get his life back together after the death of his much loathed father.

While reuniting most of the cast, the writers, and the director of 1999's `Analyze This,' one cannot help but to feel that the filmmakers have left out most of the sparkle that would make this normally `sure thing' sequel such a blast. There is a decided lack of magic to `Analyze That,' and what remains on the screen falls somewhere in between courtesy laugh material, and downright befuddlement at some of the judgment calls from the writers. Most of the film's first act is centered around Vitti's attempt to get released from jail, his scheme involving faking a mental incapacity that only allows show tunes from `West Side Story' to pass through his lips. It isn't a terribly funny punch line, nor is it sold with the energy that I'd imagine younger, hungrier filmmakers might have put into it. The letdown of the prison sequence is emblematic of the rest of the picture, which connects with laughs here and there, but nowhere near the level of `This.'

If you really want to get honest, `Analyze This' didn't even need a sequel, with `That' tasting like too many licks of the frosting. It's a fluffy, obviously fun-to-make comedy, but writers Peter Steinfeld, Harold Ramis (who also directs), and Peter Tolan don't push their film very far, insisting that the very sight of these character will be enough for the yuks to come. And it is, for about 25 minutes. Then you start to feel bad for the movie after a while, as the complex and hilarious script for `This' has been reduced to characters walking into frame saying `hey youze guys' and then expecting the audience to eat it up for the sequel. In the three years since `This,' popular culture has been swallowed by `The Sopranos,' and the various knockoffs that followed. `That' is suddenly playing a game of catch up. The script wisely sends up `The Sopranos' with the `Little Caesar' subplot, but that's about it for outright cleverness. The rest of the picture rehashes the first film, relying on the DeNiro/Crystal interplay, and dredging up some of Vitti's childhood memories for instant sympathy.

Thankfully DeNiro and Crystal do bring back their easygoing back and forth for `That.' With the script giving them very little to work with, the duo dive off on their own, trying to grasp laughs from anything they can get their hands on. As evident in the end credit outtakes, DeNiro and Crystal are having a ball, with only a sporadic joke landing true hilarity in the finished film. Ramis has some fun casting ideas (Cathy Moriarty-Gentile portrays the new crime kingpin in the film, reuniting 22 years later with her `Raging Bull' co-star DeNiro), and the return of character actor (though it always seems to be one character) Joe Viterelli, as Vitti's right hand man, Jelly, brings some much needed laughs to the show.

I've seen worse, more pointless excuses for sequels, but rarely ones that don't bother even trying to top themselves. Stick with the original, and try to forget how shamelessly the filmmakers tried to cash in with this follow-up.

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