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Film > Reviews > Walt Becker > Wild Hogs ![]() Wild HogsDirector: Walt BeckerCast: Tim Allen, John Travolta, Martin Lawrence, William H. Macy, Marisa Tomei, Jill Hennessy, Ray Liotta(Touchstone Pictures, 2007) Rated: PG-13 US theatrical release date: 2 March 2007 (General release) UK theatrical release date: 13 April 2007 (General release) By Cynthia FuchsPopMatters Film and TV Editor Bad CampingThe first joke in Wild Hogs sets its limits. Four lumpy-bodied, weekend bikers ride their machines through a suburban neighborhood, their helmets shielding their identities, except that you know who they are. As John Travolta, Tim Allen, Martin Lawrence, and William H. Macy make their along a bumpless road, their self-congratulatory smiles suggest a certain movie-styled serenity. And then the puncline: Macy, not quite so smug as his fellows, hits a curb, takes a tumble, and lands, whomp, on his kiester. Har har har. His friends smile and roll their eyes. And we’re off and running. From the director responsible for Van Wilder, Wild Hogs is another thudding men-will-be-boys saga, this time populated by middle-agey stereotypes. The premise is the plot: Doug (Allen), Woody (Travolta), plumber Bobby (Lawrence), and the odiously monikered Dudley (Macy) decide they need to change up their routines. Doug’s a dentist (but of course!), Woody’s a loudmouthed stud in hiding from the demise of his studliness (his trophy wife is leaving him, his portfolio is bankrupt), Bobby’s dominated by his scary-black-woman wife Karen (Tichina Arnold), and Dudley, well, he’s just scared of living. He, by the way, appears to deserve all mistreatment dumped on him: at the coffee shop where he hangs out, this professional computer programmer is unable to shut down an accidentally tapped porn site—something to do with barnyard animals—thus soliciting horror from fellow customers, including the pretty girl he was trying to impress. To remedy their various woes, the guys take a road trip; the one person who encourages them is Doug’s incessantly perfect wife Kelly (Jill Hennessy), understanding, with some help from emergency room doctor/media whore Drew Pinskey, that her man’s “stress-induced panic attack” might best be remedied by a little adventure. They take off the so-utterly-tired tune of “Highway to Hell,” waving to pretty girls in a jeep, sure of their manly DNA remerging. Even when they’re accosted by a horny motorcycle cop (John C. McGinley, borrowing from Lieutenant Jim Dangle) who mistakes their manly camaraderie for homosexuality, they persist, believing that they’ll find their new and better selves out there on the road. They find more purpose than they bargain for when they run smack into big meanie Jack (Ray Liotta), leader of the Del Fuegos motorcycle gang, whose mission in life is to pick on weaklings to prove his ascendancy, yadda yadda yadda. When the Wild Hogs cross Jack sort of accidentally (at least Woody doesn’t inform his buddies just how badly he’s crossed him, though it elicits a look of wonder from Jack: “Those assholes got balls!”), they find simultaneous refuge and standoff location in a teeny New Mexican town in need of Seven Samurai-style saving. As Madrid has long been terrorized by the Del Fuegos, the townsfolk are eager to see the new guys defend them. However this happens—and it hardly matters—the upshot is that each of the Wild Hogs also finds a version of “himself.” This amid a daunting array of gay jokes, black jokes, bitchy women jokes, bad camping jokes, and motorcycle/bad boy rock songs, such that the movie hits all the formulaic touchstones. The Wild Hogs gripe, bicker, and bond, and a couple of them even find true love in female forms. Marisa Tomei, of all people, plays Maggie, an independent-minded, snug-jeansed diner owner destined to rescue Dudley from his social ineptitude. That the movie is craven and insulting is not surprising, as that’s essentially the genre it claims. But you have to winder what sorts of gargantuan house payments have been incurred by someone like Liotta or Macy, that he would read the script and sign on for such robust reputational abuse. 2 March 2007Wild Hogs - Trailer Related Articles
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Comments
This movie is by no means great, but it is not as bad as you make it out to be either. I would give it about a 5 on a scale of 1 to 10. Sure, there is plenty wrong with it, yet I found myself laughing quite a bit. Given the unfunny idiocy that mostly comes out of Hollywood, I’ll take funny idiocy when it comes along. Maybe I shouldn’t, but I don’t ask for much more from a comedy than for it to actually be funny, which I found Wild Hogs to be.
Comment by Jason of New Movie Friday — March 3, 2007 @ 6:44 pm
I am sure Cynthia gave the movie a 1, mostly because she could not give a zero or a negative number! Shame on Travolta, Macy, Lawrence, Allen, Liotta, and Tomei!
Comment by Shawn from Canada — March 31, 2007 @ 4:54 am
Going by the trailer not only does the William H. Macy character not know how to close a porn pop up, the only jokes he knows are “black jokes” why is this funny? Is it so Martin Lawrence can make a face while that hackneyed record scratch noise from dozens of reality TV shows plays on the sound track?
This was one of the most unfunny trailers I’ve ever seen, god knows how bad sitting through the whole movie was.
Comment by Lorcan McGrane from Norwich — April 18, 2007 @ 4:34 pm
Wow!!!, that’s all I can comment! This film is making millions, the audiences can’t stop laughing, the DVD is selling off the shelves!
However, most of the critics are showing how out of touch they are with society today.
I swore off critics when Siskel, of Siskel and Ebert several years ago gave thumbs down to “The Natural” with Robert Redford. Ever since,
I never read a critic until after I see the film.
In most cases I’m glad, and in this case I’m estatic! My wife and another bike riding couple we were with could hardly keep in our chairs from laughing watching this film in the theater. And now that I own the DVD, I’ve watched it twice, once with the commentary on and have enjoyed it even more.
I really think that most critics go to a film expecting ‘WAR and PEACE’ or something and if they don’t see it they trash the director/writer/actors.
WHAT? When you go to McDonalds, are you expecting Mortons?
I feel sorry for critics because they rarely seem happy when they go to the movies. Alas, they get to go free though…
Comment by Bob ford from Sacramento — August 23, 2007 @ 11:58 pm