Long Shot (2019)

When a man reunites with his first crush, who’s now running for the Presidency, she hires him as her speechwriter and their relationship rekindles…

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Seth Rogen’s made his career in Hollywood with gross-out comedies; grown men behaving like teenage boys, stumbling into ridiculous situations. Hits like Superbad (2007) and Pineapple Express (2008), attracted audiences with certain expectations about a movie starring Rogen. Maybe that’s why his latest film, Long Shot, works so well. It defies expectations.

There’s still more than enough gross-out humour and juvenile sex jokes, but the story is surprisingly deep and has a lot more to say than the chuckles on the surface might lead you to believe.

It may seem Charlize Theron ( Atomic Blonde) has no business being in a romantic comedy, as the Oscar-winning actress is best-known for action (Mad Max: Fury Road) or drama ( Monster, Tully), so crass humour involving bodily fluids feels beneath her. But it’s Theron’s believability, intensity, and comic timing that gives Long Shot its heart and soul.

All the standard rom-com story beats are here: two lonely people, an unexpected rendezvous, an unintended courtship, outside forces working against their relationship, a momentary split, and a triumphant reunion. Why change a formula that’s always worked and rarely goes out of fashion? However, director Jonathan Levine ( Snatched) and writers Liz Hannah ( The Post) and Dan Sterling deserve credit for taking chances with this story.

Long Shot follows a familiar pattern but it gender-swaps the roles in a way that’s both funny and empowering. Here, it’s the female, not the male, who’s career-driven and aspirational. Presidential candidate Charlotte Field (Theron) is a strong politician and person in every sense, and that quality is matched with internal fortitude.

Contrastingly, socially-awkward journalist Fred Flarsky (Rogen) even sounds like a goofball. Fred’s an idealistic loser and a flashback reveals he’s always been that way; devoid of social grace and intellectual tact, but blessed with a pure heart. He’s the one thing Charlotte, his childhood crush, lacks in her successful but rigid life: authentic.

So while the plot tows a predictable line, Long Shot feels fresh because the leads play against their gender stereotypes, particularly for a rom-com.

It’s easy for men to say whether or not they’d vote for a woman to be the next President of the United States. The real rub is whether a man can be the more subservient half of a couple’s power dynamic? Can Fred step to the side and support a woman he loves, even if her star outshines his?

The supporting cast of the film is solid, includes Andy Serkis (Star Wars: The Last Jedi) as a blend of Rupert Murdoch and Roger Stone beneath lots of make-up; scene-stealer O’Shea Jackson Jr. ( Straight Outta Compton) gets many of the movie’s biggest laughs through his banter with Rogen; and Bob Odenkirk (Better Call Saul) plays an unsubtle version of Donald Trump.

Long Shot has a big task ahead at the box office, coming one week after Avengers: Endgame. It’s not likely to knock Marvel’s superhero epic off the top spot, but a small comedy just might be able to cleave away a smaller but appreciative audience who want to laugh hard and often.

Cast & Crew

director: Jonathan Levine.
writers: Dan Sterling & Liz Hannah (story by Dan Sterling).
starring: Seth Rogen, Charlize Theron, O’Shea Jackson Jr., Andy Serkis, June Diane Raphael, Bob Odenkirk & Alexander Skarsgård.

Originally published at https://www.framerated.co.uk on May 3, 2019.

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Jeffrey Bricker
Frame Rated

Indie author, journalist and film enthusiast. Follow me on Twitter and read more of my work at www.framerated.co.uk (contributor)