Shawn Levy, the guy at the helm of the "Night at the Museum" movies, brings his affinity for handling modern comedy actors amid a big budget production to the table, and delivers the kind of enjoyable fluff he was no doubt hired to deliver. The bigger problem is Josh Klausner's by-the-numbers screenplay, kept afloat only by the magnetism and chemistry of the talent on screen.
The story begins before 5 AM as the rambunctious, super-charged children of the slumbering Fey & Carell barge in, jump on their bed, and demand breakfast. For me personally, being the father of two such small children, this wasn't so much a look into the lives of these characters as a flashback to my house, five hours prior. I leaned to my wife and uttered, "This is not funny". Of course the story doesn't maintain this level of relatability - which if fine, except that the laughs never fully materialize, as they should.
What we get is a feature-length wacky chase involving corrupt cops and politicians, built on a case of mistaken identity. Nutty tangets (one of the better ones involves broad-skuzzy characters played by James Franco and Mila Kunis) and non-lethal gunplay abound as Fey and Carell bounce from dot to dot of the plot. Fortunately for these protagonists, they happen to have the wealth and connections (including a dull but shirtless Mark Wahlberg, playing a friendly covert ops dude,) to deal with any jam they find themselves in. (The ultimate jam being a rooftop standoff involving Ray Liotta and William Fichtner - two of the creepiest actors of the 1990s, now reduced to this type of broad clowning.) Like I said, it's all completely implausible, but that's not the point. The point is that this should placate audiences across the board, particularly when it reaches its ultimate destination as an in-fight movie. That's how airy "Date Night" is. Fey and Carell have an on-screen future together if they want it - let's just hope that the bigs laughs materialize in future projects, because for this date, they apparently left them at home.
- Jim Tudor