DINNER FOR SCHMUCKS Blu-ray Review. Jay Roach's Dinner For Schmucks stars Steve Carell, Paul Rudd, Zach Galifianakis, Jemaine Clement, Lucy Punch, DINNER FOR SCHMUCKS: Collider Shares a Meal with the ...
Matt Goldberg has been an editor with Collider since 2007. As the site's Chief Film Critic, he has authored hundreds of reviews and covered major film festivals including the Toronto International ...
This week sees the release of Jay Roach’s “Dinner for Schmucks,” starring Paul Rudd and Steve Carell. It’s a remake of a French film called “The Dinner Game,” and it’s about a group of friends who ...
After the release of “I Love You, Man,” critics couldn’t help but remark at Paul Rudd’s ability to inspire talent and vigor in his co-stars, reigning in some of the zaniest supporting actors and ...
“Dinner for Schmucks” may have officially been based on the French film “The Dinner Game,” but when I first heard about the plot, I immediately thought of “Dogfight.” The 1991 drama, directed by Nancy ...
The film follows Tim (Paul Rudd), a rising executive who has to find the ultimate imbecile guest to bring to his boss’s monthly dinner party of pathetic losers in order to get a promotion. When he ...
I laughed A LOT during “Dinner for Schmucks,” as did the friend I saw it with. As did seemingly most of the press at the screening I attended (and I’m sure some are lying about it in their reviews).
Much of the movie is supposed to be squirm-worthy: Tim’s main goal is to get a promotion and impress his artsy girlfriend Julie (Stephanie Szostack) enough so that she’ll marry him. So when his boss ...
See more of our trusted coverage when you search. Prefer Newsweek on Google to see more of our trusted coverage when you search. That's because, as the French version makes clear, the dinner is not ...
An uproarious odd-couple remake of Francis Veber's hit French farce "The Dinner Game." The setup is simple: Find a schmuck, bring him to dinner. The guy with the biggest idiot wins. (Also, no mimes.
I’ll be the schmuck (or possibly the schlemiel) and admit I didn’t really know a damn thing about Le dîner de cons, the 1998 French film that’s the basis of Schmucks, and I still haven’t watched it. I ...