Review

Unfinished Business

Dan Trunkman (Vince Vaughn) is a hard-working entrepreneur who travels to Germany to close the most important deal of his life in the comedy Unfinished Business.
Dan Trunkman (Vince Vaughn) is a hard-working entrepreneur who travels to Germany to close the most important deal of his life in the comedy Unfinished Business.

In the years since he strutted onto the scene -- lean, handsome, mouth running a mile a minute -- in Doug Liman's Swingers (1996), Vince Vaughn has become one of the poster boys for the mainstream American comedy: from romantic (The Break-Up) to bromantic (Old School), pretty good (Wedding Crashers) to very bad (Fred Claus) to frankly unnecessary (Delivery Man).

His new film, Unfinished Business, falls into that last subcategory -- perhaps not coincidentally, as it, too, has been directed by Ken Scott (Delivery Man was Scott's remake of his own homegrown Quebecois hit, Starbuck). A guys-gone-wild romp in the well-worn tradition of Todd Phillips' Hangover franchise, this is the latest example of a movie that doesn't work hard enough to freshen up formulas used and abused by filmmakers like Phillips, Judd Apatow, Nicholas Stoller (Neighbors), Seth Gordon (Horrible Bosses) and others.

Unfinished Business

77 Cast: Vince Vaughn, Tom Wilkinson, Dave Franco, Sienna Miller, James Marsden, Nick Frost, June Diane Raphael, Britton Sear

Director: Ken Scott

Rating: R, for some strong sexual content/graphic nudity, language and drug use

Running time: 91 minutes

Indeed, Unfinished Business will seem woefully familiar to most anyone who has been to a movie theater -- or taken a long plane ride -- over the past 10 years. Male sexual panic gags? Check. Drug-fueled bacchanals shown in slow-mo? Check. Car high jinks (here involving a German-language GPS)? Check. Disposable, misogynistically conceived female characters? Check. Lessons learned (don't be a bully; never give up; appreciate what you have)? Check.

And check, please.

Vaughn plays Dan, a St. Louis sales exec who quits his job toiling for a bullying boss named Chuck (Sienna Miller, gamely overdoing a brassy American accent) and starts his own company with two fellow workplace outcasts: retirement-age Timothy (Tom Wilkinson) and sweet-natured but slow-witted Mike (Dave Franco, you-know-who's little brother). The unlikely trio travel first to Maine, then to Europe in an effort to beat out Chuck for a lucrative deal with a firm fronted by Jim Spinch (James Marsden, smarming it up).

Needless to say, chaos ensues. But Unfinished Business never works up enough momentum to get us into the anarchic spirit of things. The movie unfolds, choppily, as a series of half-hearted set pieces written and directed with little flair or commitment and no connective tissue between them; some of those sequences scarcely run long enough to register, as if the studio couldn't decide whether they were worth keeping in the final cut. Like The Wedding Ringer, another mediocre male-bonding flick released during the early 2015 dump months, Unfinished Business goes through the motions, offering up ostensibly outrageous sights and situations -- a hotel maid who's actually a sex worker; Mike's quest to master a certain coital position; a professional negotiation hashed out in a gay nightclub -- either so derivative or so listlessly staged as to barely warrant a raised eyebrow.

When it's not indulging in lowbrow sex humor (not a bad thing in itself, mind you), the script, courtesy of Steve Conrad (The Pursuit of Happyness), tosses around some very lame jokes -- sometimes repeatedly. Much is made, for instance, of the fact that a main character's last name is Pancake; are you laughing yet? Even one of the movie's more gently amusing bits, Mike's serial mispronunciation of words like "exploit" and "imperative," is run into the ground.

There are a couple of good lines strewn here and there -- Dan references Walt Whitman's "Song of Myself" while telling his overweight son (Britton Sear) that masturbation is OK -- but most of the dialogue is in-one-ear-out-the-other forgettable.

Vaughn's work here might be best described as functional -- he does a very slight variation on the same persona he has been playing for years: the brash guy with a heart of gold. As appealing and assured a comic performer as he is, the actor hasn't stretched or challenged himself in a long time; Unfinished Business makes one hope, more urgently than ever, that he has something else up his sleeve on the next season of True Detective.

If the movie has a bright spot, it's Franco. Speaking in stoner-surfer cadences, his face regularly expanding into an infectiously goofy grin, the actor is the one person onscreen who seems determined to cobble together what little he's given into a distinctive character.

As a director, Scott is workmanlike though uninspired, displaying little visual imagination and even less sense of risk. Undemanding audiences may be satisfied, but Unfinished Business is the cinematic equivalent of sub-par fast food; it's cheap, easy and maybe even tasty for a second or two, but leaves you feeling queasy and undernourished.

In other words, take your business elsewhere.

MovieStyle on 03/06/2015

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