The Comedy

2012

Action / Comedy / Drama

3
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Rotten 50% · 36 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled 55% · 2.5K ratings
IMDb Rating 6.3/10 10 5408 5.4K

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Plot summary

Indifferent to the notion of inheriting his father's estate, a restless, aging New Yorker passes time with his friends in games of mock sincerity, irreverence, and recreational cruelty towards those around them.


Uploaded by: FREEMAN
April 22, 2019 at 11:39 PM

Director

Top cast

Tim Heidecker as Swanson
Kate Lyn Sheil as Waitress
Grace Rex as Hospital Nurse
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
785 MB
1280*682
German 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 35 min
Seeds 2
1.48 GB
1920*1024
German 2.0
NR
24 fps
1 hr 35 min
Seeds 9

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by domdel39 7 / 10

Out of touch

How do you recommend a movie that features a lead character who is an a--hole? Not only that, but he stays an a--hole. No redemption. No heartfelt realization that he has to change his ways and then goes about doing so - hello Scrooge! No scene where he explodes in tears and promises everyone that he loves that he's changed for good. I'm being half serious, but, really, most people go to movies to watch characters they like and root for or people they start off disliking and then, as those characters learn and grow and change, in the end, come to like and come to root for.

Swanson, a rich kid layabout who uses sarcasm as both armour and sword, is thoroughly unlikeable. He's selfish, cruel, condescending, lazy and not funny. Yet, you stay with him. At least I did. You follow him and his equally annoying friends as they hang out and drink beer and talk nonsense and bother people who are clearly just trying to ignore them. You do so because you realize that underneath all of this casual ugliness is a subtext that slowly asserts itself.

Filmmaker Richard Alverson, along with co-writers Robert Donne and Colm O'Leary, have created a profound movie about emotional avoidance that carefully ups the stakes until you truly do feel for Swanson. Strangely enough, the more cruel and vulgar Swanson gets - to a succession of people absolutely undeserving of that cruelty and vulgarity - the more it leads you closer to the heart of the character rather than further away. It is not that you grow to like him, but, you grow to understand him and, in doing so, begin to understand the true tragedy of this broken human being.

Take the opening scene - Swanson sits sipping scotch and tearing through one crispy chocolate cookie after another as, just a few feet away, his father, hooked up to an I.V., lies dying in his bed. A male nurse enters and Swanson starts laying into him. Attempting to embarrass the man by mocking the unpleasantness of his job and specifically as it relates to his father, Swanson fails. The male nurse says a lot by saying nothing - just staring at Swanson with contempt.

A simple scene, yet with complicated implications. Swanson's cruel attempt at mocking the male nurse actually tells us more about him than it does about his target. This is a stock scene, yet, what Alverson, Heidecker and company do here is play with our familiarity of the way this scene usually unfolds. As an audience member, we know this scene before a word is spoken. The shots reveal all - dying dad, son, nurse. Yet, what you get in THE COMEDY is a scene so far from what is expected that it, at first, throws you. As you slowly adjust to not getting what you expect, you realize that what you are getting is something far more interesting - an addition by subtraction experience. The subtraction is any dialogue or action dealing with the reality at hand - the father is dying - and the addition is what we the audience add in way of interpreting what Swanson - the son - is really trying to say. Of course, I can't be sure what was intended by the filmmakers and every audience member's interpretation would probably vary, yet still something universally understandable is communicated - emotional avoidance.

Swanson's target is the male nurse, but, when you look at the scene more closely, it could just as easily be himself. Just think of it - a male nurse is caring for his father. He's doing all those unpleasant tasks that you, as a son, would be doing if not for him. Why would you have any anger towards this man? The only answers I could come up with pointed at Swanson's unresolved emotional issues with his father and his own shortcomings as a human being.

I wondered, does Swanson feel guilty for never having cared for his father in his time of need? Also, I wondered, does the pain of Swanson's emotional distance from his father run so deep that the mere presence of another man caring for him arouses a kind of emotional jealousy? I use the word jealousy because Swanson, as the full film will show, exhibits such a firm indifference to the emotions of everyone around him that to see one human being caring for another human being must cause him fits. That male nurse's whole career centres around having the capacity to feel for another human being. This is one fundamental characteristic that Swanson does not possess. He just doesn't give a s***. That must sting.

So, I guess what I'm trying to say is that this film, The Comedy, made so many unusual and interesting choices in scenes that it forced me to engage with it in a way that I just don't when watching more conventional films. And, look, I know you might think I'm just trying to fill in blanks and giving the film more credit than it deserves, but, you'd be wrong. Listen to the accompanying commentary track, which features Alverson and Heidecker, and you'll quickly realize that these guys had a lot on their minds when they were making this unusual and challenging film.

So hats off to THE COMEDY, a strange and ultimately deep moving film.

Reviewed by LeonisDeon 7 / 10

Not For Everyone

There is something to be said about this film. It is real and uncomfortable, but I believe that there is something deeper going on here.

We watch a bunch of genuinely unpleasant people go from place to place, and in a nutshell that's it. At least on the surface that is.

This is could be a commentary on what freedom can do to someone. Our main character seems to have no real connection with people outside of his small group of friends. He has the possibility to inherit his father's fortune, instead goes from place to place and seems to exists.

The protagonist is a deplorable person, don't get me wrong, but you can connect with him in his longing to have something meaningful to happen. I can see some people not liking the fact that nothing seems to really happen in the film, but because our main character doesn't have anything purposeful happen to him, the film reflects that.

The cinematography in the film has a lot of up close shots allowing us to really read into the emotions of the main character.

One thing I haven't really mentioned is that the dialog is very interesting. It can go from something funny and seemingly lighthearted, but then does a complete 180. There we're several scenes where the humor is really there.

Overall, this film is not for really a wide crowd, but if any of this sounds interesting, I wholly recommend it.

Reviewed by onionsoup321 7 / 10

Hard to Watch but Painfully Real

People say the characters are hard to relate to and be empathetic towards which is completely wrong. If you hate the characters you are empathizing with them because they obviously hate themselves even more than you. With that being said it was very hard to watch some scenes and they dragged on too long, but the feeling of pointlessness in life that so many in this generation feel (including me) makes it understandable why the movie is the way it is. The repetitiveness, hopelessness, and boredom of modern life depicted through a 90 minute movie. All of us are looking for happiness but very few actually find it.

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