When Beavis and Butthead debuted on MTV’s Liquid Television in the very early 90s, it was not at all conceivable that its creator, animator and primary voice actor Mike Judge would, over the course of two decades, build a career that eventually conformed to the key points on the Troubled Maverick Timeline. First with those double entendre-happy half-brains to his long-running King of the Hill, Judge has done more to legitimize animation as a commercially viable vehicle for sly social critique than anyone in the post-Simpsons era save Matt Stone and Trey Parker. With Office Space, he cast Jennifer Aniston, then the biggest star on TV, in a sharp satire about 20 something stagnation far away from Central Perk, and audiences didn’t immediately get it. He followed that with Idiocracy, an apocalypse comedy that Fox dumped on the mere assumption that audiences wouldn’t immediately get it. Both films went on to find fervent cult audiences; Office Space looked a lot better on video and cable once its timeless comedy of little guy vengeance could be safely sifted away from the Aniston baggage; Idiocracy looked a lot better when it was actually available to be seen. After all this, it’s no wonder that Judge, who has written and directed each of his features, is treated like an auteur — quite the feat for a guy who makes visually indistinguished comedies mostly about working class guys and their frustrated ids. Who does he think he is — Kevin Smith?
Actually, Extract made me laugh more than any the last few Kevin Smith movies, but where Zach and Miri Make a Porno seemed to bring its maker’s career into sharper focus, Extract seems to derail Mike Judge’s previous progress as a filmmaker with Something to Say About The Way We Live In This United States. The story of Joel (Jason Bateman), a small business owner whose dreams of selling out to General Mills and finding a way to justify cheating on his wife are both thwarted when the insolence of one of his workers causes a chain reaction that results in another worker losing a testicle, Extract first takes too long to get going, and then seems to stumble into three or four conclusions. It’s riotously funny for about an hour in between (much of this thanks to the perfect cast, including Ben Affleck as Joel’s bartender buddy, Mila Kunis as the con bimbo who catches his eye, and Kristen Whig as his bored and boring wife), but those who have come to expect a Mike Judge movie to precisely skewer a contemporary social sphere may be disappointed. I didn’t previously give Office Space or Idiocracy much credit as anything other than very smart comedies, but Extract makes them both look like quasi-libertarian morality plays about the absolute necessity of personal responsibility. Those films were about men manning up to change the status quo; Extract is about a guy briefly taking his balls out of a drawer, juggling them for a bit and then putting them back after coming to the understanding that his status quo is actually great. Take away the ample discussion of testicles, and there’s something almost Capraesque going on here.
Yes because that’s what Capra was about after all, understanding the staus quo is great. That’s amazingly perceptive. How boring, lazy and stupid. I suppose Andrew Bujalski is somehow progressive in your eyes because you drink iced lattes with him. I usualy assume your reviews are so half assed because the films your reviewing are that way or because your young but it’s becomming clear that all though you’ve probably seen a five times as many films as anyone I know you know absolutely nothing about nothing and your just a pretentious bubblehead…
galmstadt,
You disagree with her view in one sentence, and then spend the rest of your rant personally attacking her. I find your refutation as more than half assed, hypocrite.
I’ve always thought of Karina as more of a low level PR person than anything else. I mean look at what she’s done for the whole mumblecore movement Bujalski, Swanberg and more recently that goon who swallowed the theasaurus. I mean these guys(and gals) are really passionately pushing boundaries, moving people and challenging the accepted,…attacking the norm. Their films are much more moving and life changing…revolutionary… than anything some half assed sentimentalist hack like Capra ever did. I mean Beeswax is so much more challenging than meet john doe. Bujalski’s message and overall vibe of detached bemused acceptance must be highly challenging to the status quo as it stands and all these weekend warriors that spend ninety percent of their filmic effort twittering neat crap and being glib are so obviously intellectualy superior in every way to that boring bougeuois dago. So what’s the problem almstadt? Karina isn’t just doing a job , trying to get ahead like every one else she’s wearing neat cat glasses too…
WOW galmstadt, such a nice thing to say ! U sure are proud!
look I don’t want to get into a pissy cat fight with you girls. I just took exception to the assinine half sentence dissmissal of Capra a filmmaker who for my money is relevant, important and subversive from a sight that posts two reviews of something as repugnant and meaningless as inglorious bastards. My e-mail or post may be half assed but Capras films are anything but and I don’t even know what “Capraesque” means. That’s lame. There’s two minutes in it’s a Wonderful life as far as I’m concerned that for instance pretty much rendered most of the mumblecore canon obsolete 60 years before that guy even coined the term. TWO MINUTES. It’s the exchange in the night town sequence where Stewart asks the girl to go run with him through the grass. In fact that’s the basis for all of those films. I’m sorry if you think what I said was mean (to a critic no less) but I suggest you peruse some of the reviews on this site and take a look at the post it advertisement on top of the page…
Just about everyone that gets on this site probably voted for the same person and yet everyone here seems to think they’re ahead of the curve somehow. Everybody including yourself Karina is part of the status quo. Status Quo being the our ultimate passification and continual dehuminization in the name of a wholly destructive construct that we’ve all taken to be science or law. somehow..ie the economy….or commercialism.Not sure that’s what this article was about and I don’t know much about Capra myself except for the fact that I as really moved by it’s a wonderfull life as a kid but just thought I’d mention it. I don’t think the status quo can be avoided by watching french films or at least that hasn’t worked for me. Neither have the films of most of the younger american filmmakers…ie swanberg, bujalski et al. I will say though i’m really angry and panicked about the fact that there was recently what amounted the biggest extortion ever propogated on the american people that our current president happily supported. I’m really disgusted with the proposal of fines for people who already can’t afford health insurance and I’m really disgusted by what I interpret as the high school mentality, cliquishness and ultimate emotional tepidness of the film world when what we need in every department from art to poliics is radical passionate effort and not more resigned sophistication and faux maturity. The worlds gone nuts. essentially isn’t it a bunch of cohorts trying to climb on each others backs to some level of success oe renown? that’s what the film world seems like to me. A polite corporation may hire people with blue hair but i doesn’t change the fact it’s a corporation. I’m sorry but I have to agree with galmstadt. I think what you said about Capra was silly. I won’t go so far as call you a bubblehead because you’ve written some good stuff but I really don’t think there’s anything “Capraesque about a guy who’s dream is to sell his business out to the big leagues. Maybe that’s just how you interpreted the films…
I really enjoyed this film. Ben Affleck is gaining a nice little niche as a supporting actor. He should stay that way.