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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good For Kids With Divorced Parents Or A Dead Loved One,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Click (Special Edition) (DVD)
I was thirteen when I first watched this. Already I'd gone through a whole lot.
My parents were thinking about divorcing. My bother was sick all the time. He was in the hospital a lot. I had orginally wanted to see this film for the sake of what it was marketed as: a good Adam Sandler comedy. I wanted to watch it because I needed a quick laugh. I got more than expected. It was a funny take on old, classic movies like 'It's A Wonderful Life' and 'A Christmas Carol'! I enjoyed it, but not for the reasons I expected in the first place. I'm actually starting to think that if you're sick of watching those chessy, old Christmas movies your parents force you to watch every year, you can always watch this instead. I just do not care if it doesn't have the key holiday things in it: Santa, snow, trees, etc. The ending made me cry, which makes it a good movie for December. I think that's what matters, not the snow!
36 of 48 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Whenever you lose the remote an angel gets his wings...,
By The film is light formula-fare with heart, like some of Sandler's weaker films, there are laughs to be found. Sandler is okay as the nice-guy with a crude streak. Hasselhoff is fun as the jerk boss. Some of the gags get repetitive and some aren't that funny the first time. Also an over-large amount of time is spent creating the progressively older Michael Newman. Click is directed for Sandler's Happy Madison production company by Frank Coraci of the Wedding Singer, Waterboy and most recently Around the World in 80 Days (the Jackie Chan). And Sandler again uses Henry "the Fonz" Winkler (previously in the Happy Madison universe as Coach Klien, and as himself in Little Nicky) and Julie Kavner (best known as the voice of Marge Simpson) to play his unappreciated folks. If nothing else, Sandler is a loyal guy.
12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Got me watching Adam Sandler, who rocks out loud!,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Click (Special Edition) (DVD)
If you do not know who Adam Sandler is yet, then let me say "Wake up!" This is by far his best film yet, to go along with "Big Daddy," "The Waterboy," "Anger Management," and "Happy Gilmore." Oh, I was laughing so hard when I saw this in the big house. Not only is Adam Sandler great, but so is Christopher Walkin, who plays the guy who gives Adam Sandler this remote. Alright, let me brief you about this Blockbuster flick.
A guy who is down on his luck go to "Bed, Bath, and Beyond." There he goes to the way beyond section of the store, where he meets the creator of the universal remote control (played by Christopher Walkin) that is a remote control not just for electronics, but for everyday life. With this remote, one could mute sound entirely, skip a part of life (such as, let's say you are in high school. Every time it was test time, the remote would skip it for you. How it skipped it, I am not saying). All in all, it is about one lucky dude who found a very powerful remote (he got it for FREE). So, get this film. You will not be disappointed, that is if you like Adam Sandler or if you just plain like comedy for comedy's sake. Hope I helped get you to laugh, because I sure did, as did the entire auditorium of the movie theatre I was at that day. Oh, and if you like this movie, check out "RV" with Robin Williams. Have fun and be ready to laugh out loud!
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Video Quality Review (Blu-ray),
This review is from: Click [Blu-ray] (Blu-ray)
I may have rated this Blu-ray disc higher if it weren't for the downloadable trailer available through the PS3. The trailer is perfect high definition, a reason to spend too much money on a good TV. The colors are as bright and fresh as the image is detailed. The closest I have yet seen to the 'looking through a window' effect. Stunning, absolutely stunning. So what a shock when I started watching the Blu-ray disc. Don't get me wrong, it's good, very good, but not anywhere in the same league as the trailer. I then watched a clip from the trailer and found the matching clip in the film; night and day. The film has a slight haze of grain jumping pixels throughout, the trailer has none. Colors are subdued, no, the colors are burnt and crushed in this film when compared to the trailer. The whole movie was shot digitally so what happened. If you like Click the Blu-ray disc is going to be better than the DVD, even the special features are in high definition. But after seeing the trailer it's clear that someone dropped the ball in encoding this transfer.
(PS3 - 1080p projector - 92")
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Controlling your universe is not all it is cracked up to be,
By Lawrance M. Bernabo (The Zenith City, Duluth, Minnesota) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (COMMUNITY FORUM 04) (TOP 500 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) Sandler plays Michael Newman, who has married beyond his reach the gorgeous Donna (Kate Beckinsale), and has two young kids who love him, his son Ben (Joseph Castanon) and his daughter (Tatum McCann), despite the fact that he is so busy trying to make partner at the architecture firm where he works that he is ignoring his family more and more each day. Every time he makes a promise to his family, he feels forced bo break it to satisfy John Ammer (David Hasselhoff) at work. Things are getting so bad that Michael suddenly decides that what he needs ia a universal remote, just like the O'Doyle's next door, so that at least he can turn on his TV instead of the overhead fan. So he heads off into the night and since Bed, Bath and Beyond is the only store opens, goes in to find his universal remote. What he finds instead in the Beyond part of the store is Morty (Christopher Walken), who indeed has a universal remote, and not just your ordinary universal remote, as I assume everybody knows from the previews. I must say up front that I am pretty sure I could listen to Christopher Walken say anything, up to an including the instructions for using a universal remote or any other form of technology and be thoroughly entertained. I would also add that Morty is absolutely right about Donna's body. Anyway, with his amazing universal remote Michael quickly learns that he can use it to control his world and click away his problems, from muting his dog, fast-forwarding through fights with his wife, and pausing his boss so that he can slap the guy silly (although I think close-captioning would have been funnier for the scene with the Japanese businessmen at the restaurant). Then Michael discovers the catch. It is not, as the trailer would lead you to believe, that the remote breaks. But rather, as Morty explains, that it functions like Tivo in that it pays attention to what he is doing with the remote and automatically does it again. So if you decide to fast-forward through an illness or foreplay with your wife, then that becomes the way it will be for the rest of your life. This is a fairly interesting idea given the premise of the film, and the only real flaw in it is that once you establish Michael is on "auto pilot" during the chapters of his life that are skipped, then I do not see how he could be so successful at his business given that he has to use the remote to save the bacon with the Japanese firm. But that is just because I pay attention to the rules of the game and like to take them to their logical extensions. Sandler has gathered familiar faces for this film, with Henry Winkler playing Michael's father, Sean Astin as Ben's swim coach, and even a nice cameo by Schneider, whose understate performance encouraged my hopes for this film. Perhaps the biggest surprise here is that the raunchy humor got me to laugh out loud several times, even if a grown man striking back at the Eddie Haskell-wannabee who lives next door would be wrong, very wrong indeed (but still funny). However, my wife would like me to state in no uncertain terms that what I was laughing at was clearly guy humor, and I am pretty sure she rolled her eyes and shook her head more often than she joined in on the laughing (it was hard to tell, the theater was dark and I was trying to watch the movie). Ultimately, the problem with the movie is the end, when Michael gets his second chance. That is because the screenplay by Steve Koren and Mark O'Keefe (the team who did "Bruce Almighty") invests so much in the big epiphany and final grace note at the end of the third act that they apparently have nothing much to come up with for the epilogue where we are assured Michael and his family will live happily ever after. "50 First Dates" had a great final payoff scene, and you can go all the way back to "It's a Wonderful Life" to see how well you can milk the return from Hell to the real world. Granted, you will not top the end of the Hell sequence, but then you are not supposed to. Still, there has to be a better payoff for what comes between that point and the start of the credits. I am still rounding up on this one, but I should have been in a position to round down. Final Note: Nice touch with getting Dolores O'Riordan from the Cranberries to show up to sing "Linger" live at the wedding.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
What If You Could Control Everything...,
By Justice0309 "Justice" (Joplin, MO USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Click (Special Edition) (DVD)
What would you do if you could pause, rewind, fast-forward (basically all of the functions you can do with a DVD player) with your life? Would you rewind through prior events to relive the glory days? Or would you skip ahead to avoid waiting in traffic or enduring a fight, or would you pause or slow-down a moment to make it seemingly last forever. Wouldn't it be nice if we had such capabilities, just imagine what fun a person could have with that kind of power. In Sony Pictures hit comedy "Click" Adam Sandler gets to experience what would happen with that power first hand, and sometimes the outcome isn't exactly what he had in mind.
"Click" is the story of Michael Newman (Adam Sandler), a man without a lot of spare time on his hands. He has a hectic, very demanding job, a boss (David Hasselhoff) who is ungrateful for everything that he does, and a beautiful wife (Kate Beckinsale) and kids that deserve more attention than he is able to give. After feeling like life is going nowhere fast for himself, Michael visits a local store and meets a very odd man (Christopher Walken) who gives him what may be the greatest gift of all time, a universal remote. The difference between this universal remote and all others is that this one can not only control electronics, but everyday life as well. Soon, Michael is using the remote to skip arguments or boring conversations, speed up certain activities, even going back through his life to relieve the good times as a younger man. However, the remote begins to go haywire and Michael finds his life spinning out of his control, and the more he tries to fix things the worse they get. Now, he must try to regain what he's lost before it's too late. "Click" is a movie that I wanted to see from the get-go. I thought it looked funny, it featured Adam Sandler, so I knew that was a safe bet, plus it had a great supporting cast, and what appeared to be a unique story that we all could relate to (meaning all of us that would like to have this type of control over certain aspects of life). When I finally got around to seeing the movie, I must say that it wasn't all that much like I expected. Sure, it was laugh out loud funny numerous times throughout the film, but there was seriousness to the story that was unexpected, yet a welcome addition at the same time. When the remote begins to mess with Michael's life, the movie shifts gears and becomes mostly a drama, revealing the consequences of rushing through life and how eventually it will just pass you by. It's not often that an Adam Sandler movie actually features a moral or message to the story, but this one did, and it didn't feel out of place at all. I was really surprised that for an Adam Sandler comedy, it was actually very different from his standard fare, there were his typical off-color jokes and remarks, but his character also had a sincerity to him that was uncommon for him to play. Watching him mature over the course of the film was interesting, because it forced Sandler to play more of his dramatic side rather than his slapstick side that he relies on the most. I haven't seen Adam Sandler's more serious movies "Reign Over Me" and "Punch Drunk Love", so I wasn't too sure how all of the serious elements were going to end up playing out when I saw that was definitely where the story was heading, but he handled it remarkably well. The rest of the cast was a mixture of sweet and caring (Michael's wife and kids), to somewhat strange (Michael's parents), to downright kooky and possibly on the verge of insanity (Christopher Walken's character). Each actor/actress was equally entertaining, and delivered very fun, interesting characters that were always enjoyable when on the screen. My favorite supportive character had to have been Chris Walken's, and I was happy that the writers gave him more than just a cameo of screen time. I believe he literally stole every scene he was in, and he did it so effortlessly, which is how it should be done. If you are a fan of Adam Sandler movies you should enjoy "Click", it does start out kind of slow, but after 10 minutes or so it really picks up, but there is some seriousness to it as well, so don't just expect to be laughing the entire time. But if you're not a fan of Sandler's films, and I know there are plenty of you out there, this is definitely one of his movies that I think you should see. It's a different type of Adam Sandler comedy, one with much more depth and originality than most of his efforts. Though not my favorite Adam Sandler movie, it definitely ranks up there around the top with "Big Daddy" and "The Longest Yard". "Click" is rated PG-13 for language and sensuality.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Misguided effort has its moments,
By
This review is from: Click (Special Edition) (DVD)
Click isn't a bad movie. It's just not a very funny or original one. With a plot that could have been culled from an array of anthology shows, or even a sketch comedy show (I did see it done on one), Sandler and co. tread on dangerous, often predictable ground. The movie almost succeeds, but fails because it doesn't know whether it wants to be a comedy or a drama.
The film features a well intentioned father who is a workaholic that works hard because he believes it will ultimately be better for his family. He wishes life were a lot easier and while out to purchase a universal remote for his TV, runs into the mysterious Morty who gives him a "universal" remote. Supposedly, comedy should ensue. Here is where problems come in. Watching Sandler glide through the future after his remote continually fast forwards, we are given dreary future events. Occaisonally, there are spotty laughs, usually regarding sex or bodily function. Either way, they are crude and inappropriate for the tone of the rest of the film. Then there are similarities between It's a Wonderful Life/Scrooge, and any number of stories that ask "what if" and in the end, present themselves as cautionary tales. This film is very predictable from start to finish. There are moments to this film - and the big moment is Sandler. Sandler has been positioned as a sort of everyman who somehow succeeds in all his films. He has a likeability that allows him to succeed in spite of the material. However, scripts often have lewd humor that keep Sandler from reaching his potential, as he did in Spanglish, Puch Drunk Love, and even in earlier comedies like the Wedding Singer. Take the unneccessary humor away and you have a much more watchable, if predictable, movie to watch.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
It's like TiVo, but MeVo,
By
This review is from: Click (Special Edition) (DVD)
Click is an anomaly of sorts. It isn't quite a comedy, but it's got too many funny moments to be a drama. I guess it's a dramedy, which is important to know if you go into it expecting a lighthearted, fun, family movie. It is each of those things, but at different moments. Adam Sandler plays a workaholic architect who is so busy trying to get ahead at work that his family life begins to suffer. When he is offered a "universal remote that controls your universe," he jumps at the chance to have a sense of control in his chaotic life. The next thing he knows his life is a DVD complete with commentary from James Earl Jones that he can pause, rewind, and fast forward at his leisure.
The moral of the story is that you should be careful what you wish for because when you get it, you might not want it anymore. Overall, this movie was fine, but I didn't think it was stellar. It's along the same lines of Bruce Almighty and that movie about disappearing poop with Jack Black. If you liked those, or the general message therein, I think you'll like this one. I wasn't expecting the middle part of the movie to be such a downer, but if you go into it expecting the somber moments I think you'll enjoy it more. Also, David Hasselhoff plays Sandler's boss, a completely self-absorbed misogynist. Seeing Mitch Buchanon on screen again makes this movie worth watching in and of itself.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sandler's Best Movie Yet. But He Could Have Done Without The Dog And Duck Romance Scenes!,
By Dan Blankenship "Author of THE RUNNING GIRL" (Lowell, IN USA) - See all my reviews Yes, there is a bit of bathroom (just not in the bathroom) type comedy that really didn't need to be in the movie. I don't find dogs humping a stuffed toy duck nearly as funny as Adam Sandler must. But if I overlook that little flaw, I think "Click" is Sandler's best movie to date. I know I feel like there is not enough time in the day to accomplish what should be done each day, so I completely understand how Sandler's character would be thrilled to be able to take control of his life using a super-remote-controller, given to him by Morty (Christopher Walken) in the Beyond section of Bed, Bath, and Beyond store. That part alone was completely hilarious! Michael Newman (Sandler's character) lives next door to a family who always has the best of everything, and I really loved how Sandler and the writers included the annoying brat Kevin O'Doyle (played by Cameron Monaghan) into the mix. His rants and raves about his family's luxuries, and Newman's comebacks, added some good filler to this movie. People in the audience cheered when the little brat finally got what he had coming. That means ya did good Monaghan, ya got people to really hate you! Kate Beckinsale is amazing in this production, landing her role at every opportunity given. This woman is one of the best actresses in Hollywood. Playing the role of a wife whose husband seems to be losing his mind, not to mention his family, cannot be an easy part, yet Beckinsale does it to perfection. If you haven't seen her in Underworld or Underworld: Evolution, I suggest you check those movies out as well. Christopher Walken (Morty) is always a joy to watch on screen, and while this role doesn't really let him shine, he does manage to turn in a performance that delivers some of his famous facial quirks that just make ya wonder if he's not really just a little insane in real life. Walken is a genius, like James Woods, even if the younger generation can't see it. David Hasselhoff (Newman's Boss, Ammer) is the one weak link in this film. I wouldn't even let this guy get through an audition for a high school play casting mimes. Hasselhoff may be one of the worst actors of all times! I can't believe I used to watch Knight Rider as a kid. I was young and dumb back then, so please forgive me. I absolutely loved Henry Winkler's role in this film! Talk about a realistic, witty, and gutsy performance, this is it. Just like James Garner nailed his role in The Notebook, Winkler may have turned in his best movie performance to date. "Click" is a combination of the old Adam Sandler (silly kid jokes) and the new Adam Sandler (acting gone good). It is a movie that has the viewer laughing pretty hard one minute and in tears the next. It is a movie that is unpredictable and fun. It is a movie that people should rush out to see immediately after they read this amazing review. See ya next review!
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
It's A Wonderful Life?,
This review is from: Click (Special Edition) (DVD)
In "Click," Adam Sandler stars as Michael Newman, an overworked, underappreciated architect who's let his job replace his family. Fed up with not receiving his fair share at work and knowing that he's about to lose his family, Newman snaps, decides that his family needs a universal remote just like everybody else and hurries out of his house and into the only store that's open that evening, Bed, Bath, and Beyond. What he finds in the Beyond (Way Beyond) section of the store is Morty (Christopher Walken), a sales clerk who gives him a universal remote that's a tad bit unusual. It controls every facet of his life. He can skip over watching his dog violate a stuffed duck, mute his wife during arguments, and basically bypass any of the ho-hum moments of his life in order to get to the good stuff. Unfortunately, skipping over so much of his life means that Newman misses the small things that make life worth living, and the big things that make life either grand or miserable.
In short, this flick is a play on the Christmas classic, "It's A Wonderful Life," with the typical Sandler spin. However, unlike many reviewers have stated, I don't think that the toilet humor that Sandler's accused of using in most of his past films is too distracting in this one. The first half of the film is rather humorous, thanks to a wonderful supporting cast which includes Henry Winkler, Julie Kavner, Sean Astin, and the breathtaking Kate Beckinsale. David Hasselhoff and Jennifer Coolidge also throw in some funny performances. It's the second half of the film that really makes "Click" click. As Sandler's character ages, he begins to realize that he's not that great of a guy. He also comes to find out that there are things in life that seem rather dull until you lose them. Overall, this is a decent flick. It's more deserving of three and a half stars than four, but I'll round up based on the second half of the film. It does drag at times, but it's all worth it. Recommended as a strong rental for casual Sandler fans and a definite purchase for those who love all things Sandler. |
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CLICK by Adam Sandler (DVD)
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