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All-Reviews.com Movie/Video Review
On the Line
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 out of 4
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Starring: Lance Boss, Joey Fatone Director: Eric Boss
Rated: PG RunTime: 90 Minutes Release Date: October 2001 Genre: Romance |
| *Also starring: | Amanda Foreman, Tamala Jones, Emmanuelle Chriqui, James Bulliard, Kristin Booth, Dave Foley, Jerry Stiller |
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 Review by MrBrown 1½ stars out of 4
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At the risk of losing whatever little credibility I may have as a
reviewer, let me admit this up front and get it out of the way: I most certainly
do not mind the guys of *NSYNC, and I'd go so far as to say that I like them
(and no, this has nothing to do with the fact that a few people associated with
them, not to mention one of the guys themselves, regularly read my work). Having
been the most successful of the so-called "boy bands" that have played a major
part of the huge teen pop boom of recent years, the five members would be easy
targets in any attempt to expand beyond the musical realm--after all, they
already _are_ easy targets _in_ the musical realm. But even speaking as someone
who is *NSYNC-friendly, if you will (and hence more likely to give the guys a
fairer shake), there's simply no getting around the fact that _On_the_Line_, the
feature acting debut of two-fifths of the singing group, is not a good film. In
fact, it's a rather bad example of that already barrel-bottom-scraping genre,
the teenybopper romantic comedy.
Lance Bass (who also executive produced) and Joey Fatone, the two
*NSYNC-ers who headline this formulaic filmic fluffball, at the very least
should be commended for playing it relatively safe for their maiden screen
voyage; one quality that has always set their group apart from their Tiger
Beat-staple contemporaries (*cough*Backstreet Boys*cough*) is their ability to
not take themselves too seriously and maintain a healthy sense of humor about
themselves and their teen idoldom status. This comes through in both of their
performances; as if to just get it over and done with, Bass appears (attention
teenage girls!) shirtless within the first five minutes of the film, and Fatone
shows that he is certainly unafraid to make an ass of himself onscreen.
And does Fatone ever make an ass of himself--and not entirely in a good
way--as Rod, the wannabe rocker best friend of Bass' Kevin, a young ad exec who
spends the film's 80 minutes pining over and searching for Abbey (Emmanuelle
Chriqui), one of those impossibly perfect matches that only people in movies
spontaneously meet on commuter trains. Kevin meets Abbey during one fateful trip
on Chicago's famed "L," and with one from-memory, in-unison reciting of the
names of all the U.S. Presidents, it's clear that this is a match made in...
well, movies like this. Yet the terminally timid Kevin chokes and lets Abbey go
her on her merry way without getting her number, and so he launches a major
campaign to find her by putting up posters all around town--and in so doing,
becoming a local celebrity of some sort.
No, _On_the_Line_ is not terribly realistic, but it's not as if romantic
comedies are really expected to be. What is expected, though, is some fair
measure of laughs, and director Eric Bross doesn't offer up many here. Dave
Foley has some good moments as Kevin's uppity boss, and the ever-reliable Jerry
Stiller shows up (much too briefly) as the ad agency's mail clerk, but the comic
burden largely rests on the characters of Kevin's obnoxious best
friends/roomies, and are these guys ever annoying. There's the white boy
hip-hopper (GQ), the sharp-dressed slacker (James Bulliard), and, of course,
Fatone's Rod. While his wildly overenthusiastic covers of '80s metal tunes are
good for a chuckle or two, for the most part Fatone appears to be channelling
David Arquette--not the genuinely funny Arquette of the _Scream_ movies, but the
grating one of the AT&T commercials and recent Warner Bros. comedies.
One of Arquette's better films (and one of the better examples of
teen-targeted flicks), _Never_Been_Kissed_, is not only echoed but flat out
ripped off in _On_the_Line_'s eerily similar conclusion. That's just one example
of how uninspired Eric Aronson and Paul Stanton's script is. _On_the_Line_ is
based on their own short film _On_the_L_, and the manner in which a number of
plot threads feel underwritten and truncated likely owes to those origins. Much
is made about how the newspaper columnist (Dan Montgomery) assigned to cover
Kevin's story holds a long-standing grudge against his subject, but there's no
real payoff. Similarly, Abbey's side of the film, where she struggles through a
rapidly fizzling relationship, is a creative dead end before it inevitably
reconverges with Kevin's story; a shame, since Chriqui is an appealing and
natural actress whose work here hints at a capability of doing far more than
what little she's given.
Bass proves to be similarly likable--if not exactly possessing of much
range--as the lead, but his and Fatone's work in _On_the_Line_ ultimately proves
why they are the two-fifths of *NSYNC that generally skulks in the background.
Bass is pleasant, but he hardly has a forceful enough presence to carry the
weight of an entire film. The best moments of _On_the_Line_ are the closing five
minutes, and that's not the snotty comment that it sounds like. Not only does it
feature Al Green performing a rousing and slightly more upbeat rendition of his
classic "Let's Stay Together" (marred only by GQ's wholly ill-advised and
embarrassingly vanilla rap interlude), but it includes a brief skit starring two
other members of the group. This sketch, which completely reflects *NSYNC's
happily self-deprecating off-camera sense of humor, is by far the only really
funny part of the whole film, and the two hilarious guest stars end up walking
away with the whole movie. It just goes to show that the wrong pair from within
the group was handed the movie deal.
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