Wednesday 18 July 2012

Magic Mike (2012)

Courtesy of Wikipedia
Genre: Comedy, Drama
Rating: B-

I like to try to give credit where credit is due.  With Magic Mike credit has to be given to the trailer, which I think did a really good job of presenting the movie without telling you everything that happened. So often these days movies are ruined by trailers; you find out the entire story by watching them, and all the best parts are included in them (in their entirety) so by the time you actually see the movie you already know how it ends.  The trailer for Magic Mike really isn’t like this.  All it really tells you is that Magic Mike is a movie about male strippers and one of them makes coffee tables and has a thing going on with this girl.  While the film is about that, there’s also a lot more to it – although, in many ways that is actually one of the biggest problems of Magic Mike.

This film is about two guys, Adam “the Kid” (Pettyfer) and Mike “Magic Mike” Lane (Tatum). Mike is a self described entrepreneur; he works a number of jobs, often in managerial type positions and is trying to save so that he can put a down payment on a loan that will enable him to open his own custom furniture business.  The Kid is somewhat of his opposite; he’s a slacker, immature, rash young man who seems to have no real aims in life.  At the start of the film he’s jobless and living on his sister’s couch, in need of a job but not really trying to find (and keep) one.  After meeting Mike a series of events unfold that results in the Kid getting a job at Xquisite, a popular nightclub that features male strippers.  From there the Kid’s life takes an interesting turn, especially after once he becomes involved in a drug selling scheme.  Mike, meanwhile is trying to straddle two worlds, pardon the pun, stripper by night and entrepreneur by day; he’s also growing closer with Adam’s sister, Brooke (Horn), while partaking in what was meant to be an on-again off-again relationship, but came across as a series of booty calls with Joanna (Munn). Overshadowing the whole thing is the attempt to move the club from Tampa to Miami (because Miami is where all good male strippers go in order to become famous? I have no clue).

A few criticisms of the movie that I’ve heard revolve around it not having a story – I disagree, and counter that the problem with Magic Mike is that it has too much story.  The film doesn’t seem to really know what kind of movie it wants to be.  A lot of it is presented as a mockumentary, which I actually really enjoyed, but at other points it seems to drop this in order for… well, for flashier strip scenes.  I think in the long run, the movie would have been far better served by picking one style (preferably the mockumentary) and sticking with it.  There are points when it is trying to be a funny stripper movie, points when it’s trying to be a serious stripper movie, and points when it’s trying to be a guy meets girl type of movie.  At some points it weaves these different genres together rather nicely, at other points it doesn’t seem to work as well.  I think the film would have gained a lot by simplifying some of these plots, removing some of the characters, and sticking to just one format. Where it does succeed, however is in the humour - especially among secondary characters, who are often doing things in the background - and the actual dancing.  I'm not talking about the stripping per say, but the dancing itself.  Say what you want about Channing Tatum's acting skills, he is a really good dancer.  I would love to see him do more expanding on that talent than along other lines that he's pursued in his acting career.

The next little bit is going to be somewhat spoilerish, and for that I apologize.  The film’s conclusion is rather open ended, having addressed some of the plots but not all of them.  There is a lot that is left undetermined, and even what is determined is rather vague in terms of ‘what could be’.  When I left the film I was actually rather unsatisfied by the ending because of just how abrupt it worked out.  Having read a few other reviews and a few threads on the ending on the IMDb boards, I think my opinion of the movie is a bit changed.  It was pointed out that the way that Magic Mike ends is a lot like real life; things don’t always get wrapped up with a nice little bow in real life, and people do come in and out of your life without any real conclusion to things.  Often times, a descent into a life of drugs doesn’t end with a happy resolution, and Magic Mike does rather subtly address this.  I’m not sure that I would say I’m happy with the ending as the film was, but with that in mind I think had some of the other problems of the movie been addressed, especially in terms of overall format, I would have been a lot less disappointed.  Really, in a lot of ways I think the ending for Magic Mike was a lot like the ending for Take This Waltz – neither were intended to resolve things, but rather make you think and leave you wanting more.  That having been said, however, Tatum has reported that they’re planning on doing a sequel, hopefully in which a lot of this stuff is going to resolve.

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