PLAYING
WITH FIRE (2019)
Starring
John Cena, Keegan-Michael Key, John Leguizamo, Tyler Mane, Brianna
Hildebrand, Christian Convery, Finley Rose, Judy Greer, Dennis
Haysbert. Directed by Andy Fickman. (95 min)
ON
BLU-RAY FROM PARAMOUNT
Review
by Stinky the Destroyer😾
The
bloopers are the funniest part of Playing with Fire. Whoever
assembled this disc must’ve known it, too, because the same gag
reel is featured twice, first during the end credits, then as one of
the bonus supplements. Other featurettes show the cast clearly having
a great time.
However,
the movie itself is painfully unfunny. From the opening scene – so
over-the-top that I first thought it was a dream sequence – Playing
with Fire sinks under the weight of its own stupidity, an almost
plotless parade of broad slapstick, obnoxious caricatures and
heavy-handed sentimentality.
The
film squanders the comic talents of John Cena, John Leguizamo and
Keegan-Michael Key, all of whom are simply dumbfounded straight-men
to three troublemaking kids. None of the children are remotely
likable and the entire premise rests on the conceit that their
“mischief” is funny, when actually their behavior borders on
antisocial. Despite the fact their lives were just saved, teenager
Bryann is full of nothing but eye-rolling sarcasm and steals a couple
of vehicles (destroying both), younger brother Will gleefully causes
massive amounts of property damage and screeching toddler Zoey
predictably poops her pants, leading to an interminable scene where
Cena is forced to change her (in full protective gear, of course).
A characteristically low-key moment in Playing with Fire. |
The actions of these
little urchins would have Mike & Carol Brady considering infanticide. Instead, the story takes a sudden saccharine turn once the
fate of their parents is revealed. All is forgiven and forgotten as
Jake (Cena) and his crew instantly become loving, protective
guardians, spoiling the hell out of them with a birthday celebration
that would humble Veruca Salt. As irritating as the first half is,
the second is almost unbearably sappy and the expectation that the
audience will feel the same warm fuzzies is almost insulting.
Undiscriminating children might enjoy it once or twice. Everyone else will
find Playing with Fire an excruciating endurance test, making
Problem Child look like Matilda. A complete waste of a
fine cast, it’s bewildering that anyone involved thought this was a
worthwhile use of their talent. The whole film is pandering,
cynically assembled and almost completely laugh-free.
EXTRA
KIBBLES
FEATURETTES
- “Lighting Up the Laughs” (behind the scenes); “The
Director’s Diaries: Read by the Star Cast (title tells all); “The
Real Smokejumpers: This is Their Story” (interesting but ironic,
considering how little smokejumping is actually featured in the
film); “What it Means to be Family”; “Storytime with John
Cena.”
DELETED
SCENES
BLOOPERS
– Same as those in the end credits.
DVD
& DIGITAL COPIES
KITTY CONSENSUS:
BLEH! LIKE COUGHING UP A HAIRBALL.
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