Welcome to "Ranked", a weekly series where I rank a franchise or filmography from worst to best and hand out assorted related superlatives. This week, I'm profiling the work of Bob Odenkirk-whose latest project "Normal" releases in theaters tomorrow.
Bob Odenkirk's Filmography Ranked:
17.Movie 43 (D)
16.Dr. Doolittle 2 (C-)
15.The Cable Guy (C-)
14.Take Me Home Tonight (C)
13.Freaks of Nature (B-)
12.Let's Go to Prison (B-)
11.The Giant Mechanical Man (B-)
10.The Post (B)
9.The Brothers Solomon (B)
8.Little Women (B)
7.Nobody 2 (B+)
6.Nebraska (B+)
5.Nobody (A-)
4.The Disaster Artist (A-)
3.Long Shot (A)
2.Dolemite is My Name (A)
1.The Spectacular Now (A)
Top Dog: The Spectacular Now (2013)
I was 21 when The Spectacular Now came out and when I saw it, it bowled me over in a way that very few coming-of-age drama ever had. Part of me thought that would change when I re-watched it last week given how much time has passed since I'd last seen it, but I feel the exact same way about The Spectacular Now today as I did back then. The raw, unflinching honesty on display here is just remarkable to witness. These characters are reckless, impulsive, sweet, thoughtful, selfish, self-destructive, loving, charming and about a million other things because they're real, complicated people that are trying to start figuring out who they want to be as they prepare to leave high school and the stunning performances from Miles Teller and Shailene Woodley reflect these multitudes with a level of authenticity rarely seen on screen.
Bottom Feeder: Movie 43 (2013)
In honor of his latest movie Balls Up releasing on Prime Video today, I'm going to take a moment to dump all over the biggest stain on Peter Farrelly's resume. The veteran lowbrow comedy director was the primary architect of this wretched star-studded anthology comedy that made the previous feature he made with his brother Bobby (2011's Hall Pass) look like a sophisticated laugh riot and ultimately, ended up being the only person involved with the project that was brave enough to acknowledge their involvement with it after it became clear that this endeavor was going to be a huge failure on every possible level. Remarkably, Farrelly went onto direct Best Picture winner Green Book 5 years later, which just goes to show you how rapid the pendulum can shift for some creatives in this industry.
Most Underrated: Dolemite is My Name (2019)
It seems like every few years, Eddie Murphy will have a big "comeback" movie designed to remind the world of just how talented he is. In my view, Craig Brewer's terrific Rudy Ray Moore biopic Dolemite is My Name is the only movie to receive this posturing that actually deserved it. Murphy is hilarious, sweet and magnetic as the DIY entertainment legend who gets to live out his dream of making a movie with the Blaxploitation classic Dolemite and Brewer's electric direction does a great job of capturing the infectious, manic energy that drove the production of the gleefully ridiculous 1975 cult classic.
Most Overrated: The Cable Guy (1996)
For many years, I'd heard how The Cable Guy was one of Jim Carrey's finest hours as a performer. When I finally watched it last spring, I was deeply underwhelmed not only by Carrey's performance, but the film itself. While I understand that the titular character is designed to be incredibly obnoxious, Carrey turns up his manic schtick to such a high level that it becomes exhausting to watch, and the darkly comedic turns the story takes aren't nearly funny or clever enough to overshadow the grating maximalism of Carrey's performance.
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