Paul Rudd, Tim Robinson and the art of social suicide
★★½
CTC. 100 minutes. In cinemas July 17
Friendship is a comedy of embarrassment. It may make you may laugh or, like me, you may spend most of the film muttering, 'No, don't do it.'
It's an absurdist take on male friendship. Craig Waterman (Tim Robinson) has no friends of either sex. In contrast, his wife, Tami (Kate Mara), who readily admits that their sex life is far from orgasmic, has many friends. In the film's opening scene, she's about to go out with one who also happens to be an ex-boyfriend. Craig, on the other hand, is staying home alone in front of the television, having failed to persuade their teenage son to watch the latest Marvel movie with him.
This routine changes abruptly when Craig meets the family's new neighbour, Austin Carmichael (Paul Rudd), a TV weatherman who fancies himself an adventurer. Instead of saying 'see you later' at the end of their first meeting, he points a finger at Craig and cries: 'Stay curious!'
Instantly entranced, Craig takes him seriously and Austin, deciding that he's an affable eccentric with entertainment value, starts hanging out with him. They go on adventures together and Craig begins to loosen up with predictably mortifying consequences.
The film's director, Andrew DeYoung, a friend of Robinson's, wrote the role especially for him by way of giving him the chance to elaborate on the kind of embarrassments he's been perpetrating in I Think You Should Leave Now, the sketch comedy series that has acquired a cult audience on Netflix.
The typical Robinson character knows no boundaries. He's a juvenile variation on Larry David in Curb Your Enthusiasm. Whatever you say about Larry's tin-eared response to the sensitivities of others and his tenacity in holding a grudge, he's a grown-up. Robinson, however, is stuck in pre-adolescence. He's the naughtiest kid in the class, harbouring an obsession with bodily function jokes together with a bubbling desire to shock in the most bizarre way he can dream up.
Naturally, he soon proves too much for Austin and after one particularly disastrous evening, Austin tells Craig that they're breaking up. The friendship is over.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Uma Thurman opens up about intense physical preparation she underwent for Kill Bill movies
Uma Thurman has opened up about the intense physical preparation she underwent for the Kill Bill movies. The 55-year-old actress, renowned for her iconic role as The Bride in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill Vol 1 and Vol 2, discussed her martial arts training during an interview about her new project, The Old Guard 2. Revealing her return to action films this year came without time for full training, Uma told The Sunday Times: 'Fortunately I had put in hundreds of hours learning how to hold a sword (for Kill Bill 1 and 2),' she said. In her new action film, a sequel to the 2020 Netflix action hit, Uma plays Discord, a 5,000-year-old immortal warrior who engages in an epic sword fight opposite Charlize Theron's character, Andromache, near a secret nuclear facility. Uma added about her Kill Bill muscle memory coming in handy during the shoot: 'You may not be limber and strong. 'But if your brain has learnt how to memorise sequences of movements, you can get back in that zone.' For Kill Bill, Uma trained for eight hours a day across three months in preparation for the role. That experience, she said, proved invaluable when returning to the genre. Her character in The Old Guard 2 marks her first sword-wielding performance since Quentin Tarantino's films, and it has been more than two decades since she last performed choreographed combat on screen. Uma's new film is directed by Victoria Mahoney and follows a group of age-old warriors with supernatural powers who fight to protect humanity. The original, directed by Gina Prince-Bythewood, was praised for its blend of grounded drama and stylised violence. Speaking about the appeal of The Old Guard, Uma said: 'I thought that first movie was really unusual, a superb female-led action film that had depth, drama and really beautiful, naturalistic acting.' She also credited her co-star and producer Charlize Theron, 48, as a major draw for signing on. Uma added: 'Charlize is a miraculous performer, a very powerful individual and as charismatic in person as on screen. 'And I liked the idea of playing a supporting role to another actress who I thought had done really significant work in the drama/action field.' Charlize, who also produced both instalments of The Old Guard, told The Sunday Times as part of its feature on Uma: 'I have always admired Uma from afar. From Dangerous Liaisons to Kill Bill, her work is a masterclass in finding the micro in characters. 'In moments I got so lost watching her in scenes we had together that I had to remind myself I was in the scene with her. She's that captivating.'


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Eric Bana thinks it's more ‘interesting' when his characters are killed off in movies
Eric Bana thinks it's more 'interesting' when his characters are killed off in movies. The Time Traveller's Wife star, whose career spans Hollywood blockbusters and independent dramas, opened up about how he would rather die in his films than be a leading man until the finale in a chat with The Independent. He said: 'I'm very happy to die, you know? I'm happy to be killed off in something. I'm happy to support (other actors) – it's just more interesting. –I don't want the audience to see me and think he's going to be the main guy until the end credits roll.' Australian Eric, best known for roles in Troy, Munich, and Ang Lee's Hulk, was born and raised in Melbourne, and made a name for himself as a comedian before transitioning into acting. He has cultivated a reputation for playing anti-heroes and supporting roles that bring depth and nuance to his projects. Married to his wife Rebecca since 1997 and a father of two, Eric also prefers staying grounded in Melbourne despite his international success, The Independent's profile on the actor revealed. His latest project, the Netflix series Untamed, exemplifies this approach. Set in Yosemite National Park, Eric plays Kyle Turner, a taciturn park ranger investigating the murder of a young woman. He said about the project: 'It's not often that your lead character is allowed to get away with being so uncharming. ''And we got to lean into the gruffness, the darkness and the uncomfortable (areas.)' His co-star Sam Neill, who plays a senior park ranger and the only person to crack his character Kyle's tough exterior, was someone Eric had never met before filming. He said: 'I really felt like I knew Sam, and Sam felt like he knew me. 'But we'd not only never met, we'd never even been at the same function together – just nothing'' Eric attributes his discerning approach to scripts partly to his background in comedy. He said: 'When you're writing, if an idea doesn't fly in the room with other writers and we're not laughing, you can't expect the audience to make the joke better. 'So you have to be forensic about it – working in comedy always felt like being an X-ray machine, you know?'


Perth Now
14 hours ago
- Perth Now
Lindsay Lohan is determined to be 'fully involved' in her films
Lindsay Lohan aims to be "fully involved" in her movie projects. The 39-year-old actress reprises her role as Anna Coleman in Freakier Friday, the forthcoming sequel to the 2003 flick Freaky Friday, and revealed that she had plenty of say in her character's development in the bodyswap comedy after working as an executive producer on her recent Netflix projects. Lindsay told Empire magazine: "It really came from the movies I was doing with Netflix. "I was like, 'I know this.' When I'm reading the script, I'm already visualising where it's going to be, what the character's wearing. "(That journey) was a big part of what the new script was going to be. I like to be fully involved in the projects I do now, from the ground up. I really enjoy sharing my knowledge I've acquired over all these years in the industry, and don't want to let that go to waste. That's a big part of who I am as an actor now." Both Lindsay and Jamie Lee Curtis (as Anna's mother Tess Coleman) return for Freakier Friday – which is set for release next month – and she recalled how the Halloween icon approached her about making the movie. The Parent Trap star recalled: "She said, 'What do you think, if we do Freaky Friday 2?' "I was like, 'I'm in, it just has to be the right script.' That was the big thing for both of us. We wanted it to live up to all the expectations." Lindsay and Jamie have remained close friends since the original flick and the former revealed how she would lead the pair in exercises on set. She said: "Between takes, I would make Jamie do wall sits. "She'd be like, 'Are we really doing this right now?', and I'm like, 'Yes, it's good for us.'" Lohan's alter ego is a mother in the sequel and she got some real-life insight for the part when she and her husband Bader Shammas welcomed son Luai in 2023. She explained: "Anna's a mom now, raising a teenager, and the dynamic there is ever-changing. "You also have Tess, who is still kind of overbearing – and it's another merging of two families (with Anna getting ready to marry Eric, who is played by Manny Jacinto). "The whole world looks different. Everything is about your child. But we have to remember to make time for ourselves too, live our lives, fulfil our dreams. Moms are always trying to juggle it all, and that's what Anna's going through in this." Anna once again plays the guitar in this movie and Lindsay was elated to pick up the instrument as it brought back fond memories of the original film – although she wanted more of a musical challenge this time. The Mean Girls star said: "The second I started with my guitar coach again, it was like we never left. "It was the same guitar, everything. It was like it was yesterday. "We made it more difficult for this one. I'm such a perfectionist; we rehearsed a lot."