Web Wombat - the original Australian search engine
 
You are here: Home / Entertainment / DVDs / Reviews / The Pink Panther
Entertainment Menu
Business Links
Premium Links
Web Wombat Search
Advanced Search
Submit a Site
 
Search 30 million+ Australian web pages:
Try out our new Web Wombat advanced search (click here)
DVDs
Humour
Movies
TV
Books
Music
Theatre

 The Pink Panther

Buy Now
Review by Clint Morris

Being a stepmother to someone else’s children is an interesting state of affairs. There’s no way you’re ever going to love anything quite as much as the real thing, but at the end of the day, you’ll try, and you will experience a full range of emotions – not just love, but resentment, melancholy and bewilderment – towards them.

The Pink Panther

Apply the analogy to the redo of the classic Pink Panther, with Blake Edwards' original as your biological bub and Shawn Levy’s retread as the stepchild, and you’ll get an indication of what to expect here.

To be fair, the filmmakers were never going to sway audiences over with a remake of the classic comedy caper, because in essence, as a film, it was more untouchable than Al Capone. Mainly, regardless how good the chap that inherited Peter Sellers' trademark French moustache would be – and Steve Martin is pretty good – he was never going to quite measure up, was he? Best thing to do then? Think of this one as the first in the series – a totally disattached film that simply carries the same title as a movie you adore. It helps, believe me, and you might actually find yourself with an arched maw.

Famous soccer coach Yves Gluant (Jason 'The Transporter' Statham in an unbilled cameo, there’s another chap who makes a cameo later on too – which is even funnier) is killed on the field with a poison dart. Since the players were surrounding him at the time, nobody saw where the shot was fired.

French Chief Inspector Dreyfus (Kevin Kline, no doubt wishing he’d been asked to play Clouseau) decides to hire the bumbling egomaniac, Inspector Clouseau (Steve Martin) to solve the crime. In between destroying hotels, naively harming the onlooker, being arrested in airports, and essentially just being plain unmindful – he eventually does just yet.

OK, so it’s not quite as funny as the originals – we keep coming back to that, don’t we? – and it seems to have more in common with the better Leslie Nielsen comedies, like The Naked Gun series, than the Edwards’ franchise, but for what it’s worth, this is as good as it was ever going to get, and believe me – with names like Chris Tucker and Mike Myers once linked to the project – it could have been a lot, lot worse. What’s also good is that the studio hasn’t outed all the best bits in the trailer, so you’ll discover a couple of very unexpected belly laughs, especially one moment where our bumbling French copper attempts to learn English. You’ll never be order a Hamburger without thinking of the moment again.

A fun and animated return to film for one of cinema’s favourite characters, and a treat for the generation that have never seen him before, the new The Pink Panther is a satisfying comedy – just don’t watch the originals before you pop along to the remake, like moss on a tasty multigrain roll, it’ll only spoil it.

EXTRAS

Extras on the DVD include an enlightening commentary by director Shawn Levy, a behind-the-scenes doco, an alternate opening to the film (as well as several other deleted scenes) and a couple of featurettes.

Conclusion: Movie 65% Extras: 60%

Buy Now

Shopping for...
Visit The Mall

Promotion

Home | About Us | Advertise | Submit Site | Contact Us | Privacy | Terms of Use | Hot Links | OnlineNewspapers | Add Search to Your Site

Copyright © 1995-2012 WebWombat Pty Ltd. All rights reserved