The entire film feels like outtakes.
Showtime (2002)
Tomatometer
How does the Tomatometer work ![]()
Reviews Counted:120
Fresh:29
Rotten:91
Average Rating:4.7/10
Consensus: Showtime starts out as a promising satire of the buddy cop genre. Unfortunately, it ends up becoming the type of movies it is satirizing.
Runtime: 1 hr 35 mins
Genre: Comedies
US Box Office: $37,904,545
Synopsis:
No-nonsense LAPD detective Mitch Preston (ROBERT DE NIRO) is a man of few words and even less style. All he asks is that he be left alone to do his job. Patrol Officer Trey Sellars (EDDIE MURPHY)...
No-nonsense LAPD detective Mitch Preston (ROBERT DE NIRO) is a man of few words and even less style. All he asks is that he be left alone to do his job. Patrol Officer Trey Sellars (EDDIE MURPHY) is a different story. Instead of being a cop, he would much rather play one on TV. A frustrated actor, he spends his workdays rousting pickpockets and his evenings perfecting his action poses in front of a mirror.
One night Trey stumbles into an undercover operation in progress, blowing Mitch's chance of nailing a drug dealer. At the same time, a television news crew barges in on the action, lights ablaze, further hindering Mitch's attempts to catch his fleeing suspect. Frustrated at seeing months of work go down the drain, the detective fires a shot at the camera. If there's anything he hates, it's intrusive reporters. And if there's anything he hates more than that, it's a joke of a cop like Trey getting in his way.
Mitch's impulsive action lands his photo on the front page of every newspaper the next day, simultaneously buying him an official reprimand and making him an instant media celebrity. Knowing a sure ratings draw when she sees one, network television producer Chase Renzi (RENE RUSSO), a no-holds-barred hit-maker, swoops in and sells the Chief of Police on the PR benefits of letting her crew follow Mitch around the clock for a live reality show about cops. It's the last thing in the world Mitch wants to do but the only thing that will get him off suspension so he get back to pursuing the drug dealer who slipped through his hands.
But first, to compensate for Mitch's gruff manner and total lack of acting talent, Renzi must find him a charming, talkative, camera-ready partner -- someone more polished, more media savvy, someone more like...Trey. Nevermind that Mitch can't stand the sight of him. Together, they're poised to become stars of the biggest hit reality show in history. For Mitch, it's a living hell. For Trey, it's his dream come true.
It's "Showtime."
Warner Bros. Pictures presents, in association with Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment, a Material Production in association with Tribeca Productions: Robert De Niro, Eddie Murphy and Rene Russo in the action comedy "Showtime", starring Frankie R. Faison and William Shatner. The film is directed by Tom Dey from a screenplay by Keith Sharon and Alfred Gough & Miles Millar, story by Jorge Saralegui. Jorge Saralegui and Jane Rosenthal are the producers; Will Smith, James Lassiter, Eric McLeod and Bruce Berman are the executive producers. Billy Weber is the editor, Jeff Mann is the production designer and Thomas Kloss is the director of photography. Music is by Alan Silvestri. "Showtime" will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures and in select territories by Village Roadshow Pictures.
-- © Warner Bros.
Starring: Robert De Niro, Eddie Murphy, Rene Russo, William Shatner
Starring: Robert De Niro, Eddie Murphy, Rene Russo, William Shatner, Frankie R. Faison, Drena De Niro, Mos Def, TJ Cross, Kadeem Hardison, Johnnie Cochran
Director: Tom Dey
Director: Tom Dey
Screenwriter: Keith Sharon, Alfred Gough, Miles Millar
Producer: Jorge Saralegui, Jane Rosenthal
Composer: Alan Silvestri
Studio: Warner Bros.
Reviews for Showtime
De Niro looks bored, Murphy recycles Murphy, and you mentally add Showtime to the pile of Hollywood dreck that represents nothing more than the art of the deal.
[De Niro and Murphy] manage to entertain, even if it seems they could have phoned in their performances.
Showtime is by no means great cinema, but it does succeed in taking your mind off terrorism, global warming, taxes, and impending old age for about 95 minutes.
Showtime's complete lack of originality oozes off the screen like, um, rancid popcorn butter.
... its breeziness keeps it from ever being completely bland or flat.
[B]eyond proving that there are no new ideas in Hollywood, Showtime could have been worse and is fun in its own small way.
[N]o matter how much good will the actors generate, Showtime eventually folds under its own thinness.
Instead of being a spoof of buddy flicks, Showtime is a buddy flick. And a not particularly good one despite the presence of Robert De Niro and Eddie Murphy.
A good, old-fashioned, suspend-all -disbelief, Hollywood comedy that leaves you laughing like crazy.
It's the chemistry between De Niro and Murphy that makes Showtime work, because it's certainly not the script or Tom Dey's uninspired direction.
Without a heavy dose of self-reflexive irony, the film's ample use of cliches don't come across as clever -- they're just cliches.
... most of Showtime is a layering of tired pop-culture tropes by actors who are not especially interested in what they're doing.
Between them, De Niro and Murphy make Showtime the most savory and hilarious guilty pleasure of many a recent movie season.
So how many exes and children does Robert De Niro have to support, anyway? It's one of the things you could think about while enduring the abysmal Showtime ...
Not that any of us should be complaining when a film clocks in around 90 minutes these days, but the plotting here leaves a lot to be desired.
It's really yet another anemic and formulaic Lethal Weapon-derived buddy-cop movie, trying to pass off its lack of imagination as hip knowingness.
Latest News for Showtime
January 18, 2006:
Trailer Bulletin: Failure to Launch
Matthew McConaughey and Sarah Jessica Parker team up for Paramount's romantic comedy "Failure to Launch," which focuses on a 35-year-old man who refuses to move out of... More...
July 06, 2005:
"The Big House" Has Its Dey
According to Variety, director Tom Dey ("Shanghai Noon," "Showtime") will step behind the cameras to helm a family comedy entitled "The Big House."... More...
April 15, 2005:
Zooey Prepares for "Launch"
The Hollywood Reporter gets with the reporting by informing us of "Failure to Launch," an upcoming romantic comedy from Paramount. The blue-eyed Zooey Deschanel... More...
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