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2009-09-24 15:04:00Miss Congeniality - 2 Stars (Average)
"Miss Congeniality" had a real identity problem as a movie.
Unfortunately for Sandra Bullock, the star of the film as FBI agent
Gracie Hart, Miss Congeniality could not take her as far as her
performance merited.
She did win a second Golden Globe nomination for Best Actress in a
Musical or Comedy; her first was the same nomination for her role as
Lucy in "While You Were Sleeping".
Released in 2000, Miss Congeniality is not a drama, an action
adventure, a police flick, a comedy or a romantic comedy. It is a
mismatch of all and a master of none. When you add in the corny,
juvenile, inappropriate dialog, the film is lucky it had Sandra Bullock
as its centerpiece because without her, it would have been beyond
dismal.
In other words, the writers of Miss Congeniality—Marc Lawrence,
Katie Ford and Caryn Lucas (and these may be the only ones who were
willing to take credit for the script)—did not add much beyond the
plot.
Gracie Hart is cast as an unattractive, disheveled, bumbling FBI
agent who has no life beyond her 24/7 commitment to her job. When it is
determined that a wacko, serial killer has set his sights on a Miss
United States beauty pageant, Agent Hart is a reluctant last choice to
go undercover.
Hart is such a poor choice that beauty consultant Victor Melling
(played by veteran Michael Caine) is brought in to polish her
appearance and performance as Miss New Jersey. Melling has 2 days to
get the job done; this is just one example of an unbelievably bad
script; even in this wannabe comedy, nothing rings true. It is like
having a chair with no legs.
When the real serial killer is caught before the pageant ends, the
FBI gets up and leaves. Hart realizes that something is amiss and hangs
around on her own, suspecting that the most recent letter from the
killer is written by a copycat killer for convenience. You will have to
see the movie for the rest.
Even director Donald Petrie could not totally control the amount of
glut in Miss Congeniality's script. There were enough sidesteps,
missteps and sight gags for a novelist to write a trilogy, and none of
them worked all that well. Petrie cut some of the crap out, but the
writers were trying to make a career out of writing one script.
Enough carping. Miss Congeniality had a few good moments, but I
would not watch it a second time. One real positive was the final still
picture of Sandra Bullock at the end of the film—she never looked
better.
Please
watch video of this movie.
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