Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls

Wednesday, 9 Feb 2005 1:22

Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls


Movie Review

From Jerry Lewis to Eddie Murphy, the bottom-line rule of thumb in contemporary American film comedy has been that the more control a performer has over his movies, the less funny - less daring, more self-indulgent - they become. Not so Jim Carrey, whose fourth starring role, in ACE VENTURA: WHEN NATURE CALLS (Warner Bros., PG-13), is his best yet. Unlike so many superstar comics before him, Carrey has retained a raw hunger for The Joke - the killer punchline, the ultimate sight gag - that seems insatiable, and this gives his work a furious, omnivorous energy. Even when the jokes are as corny as this movie’s subtitle is, Carrey regularly squeezes a laugh out of you through sheer force of will.

When Nature Calls finds pet detective Ace Ventura in Africa, where he’s in search of a rare white bat. Unlike his character in Dumb and Dumber, Carrey’s Ace is all coolness and confidence - he swaggers around the jungle with that hip-swiveling, John Wayne-on-joy juice walk, sassing everybody in sight. (Trust me: Kids all over America will be hitting you with Ace’s new wise-guy catchphrase “Spank you - spank you very much.”) As always, the verbal comedy is nonsensical and vulgar, and the physical humor is rigorously conceived and really vulgar.

ace ventura_ when nature calls movieIan McNeice plays the English diplomat who accompanies Ace on his bat quest, and Carrey’s In Living Color cohort Tommy Davidson is terrific (and unrecognizable) as a battling member of the Wachootoo tribe. But mucus might just as well receive costar billing too, for all the gleefully gross screen time Carrey gives it. There’s also a scene in which a mechanical rhinoceros “gives birth” to a naked Ace (sorry, the context is impossible to explain here) that would do Laurel and Hardy - and Luis Buñuel - proud.

Carrey and his writer pal Steve Oedekerk, making his debut as a director, are fearless in their spoofs of African-jungle-movie stereotypes. They get away with potentially offensive stuff simply: None of the black characters are stupid, or mere figures of fun. (Carrey works in a sweetly silly romantic scene with the film’s only prominent woman, a tribal princess played by Sophie Okonedo.) To be sure, When Nature Calls is very uneven and pretty much falls apart in the last half hour, but it’s a heck of a lot of fun before that. Plus, Carrey is one of the few comedians I know of who, at the end of the 20th century, are resourceful enough to coin a fresh slang term for masturbation (for the record, it’s “practicing my mantra”). (movie review by: Entertainment Weekly)

Movie Information

Year: 1995
Opening week-end: 37,800,000$
Total Box-Office Gross: 107,000,000$
Produced by: James G. Robinson
Co-Starring: Ian McNeice, Simon Callow, Maynard Eziashi
Directed by: Steve Oedekerk
Studio/Video: Warner Bros./Warner Home Video
Role: Ace Ventura: Pet Detective
Salary: 12,000,000$
Time Length: 94 minutes
Mins.Rated: PG-13

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