‘Couples Retreat’ Satisfying if Unspectacular
by Carl KozlowskiYou’ve met couples like this before: longtime marrieds approaching 40 and facing stress from fertility problems, work-aholism, lack of communication or just flat-out losing the spark and giving up hope. In fact, you might have lived through these problems yourself.
But in the new movie “Couples Retreat,” which not only co-stars but is co-written by real-life best friends Vince Vaughn (“Wedding Crashers”) and Jon Favreau (a popular character actor who has also directed “Iron Man”), these average middle-class American problems are given hilarious voice through vivid performances and rapid-fire dialogue. Or, more accurately, the movie shines when it focuses on those aspects of life in the first half of the film, while disappointingly falling off a cliff for much of the unfocused second half. Yet, just like a real-life marriage that lasts, the ups outnumber the downs enough to make this a satisfying if not spectacular night at the movies.

“Couples Retreat” kicks off with uptight couple Jason (Jason Bateman) and Cynthia (Kristin Bell of “Forgetting Sarah Marshall”) begging their other friends – workaholic Dave (Vaughn) and his neglected wife Ronnie (Malin Akerman of the underrated remake of “The Heartbreak Kid”), and high school sweethearts-turned-bored middle-agers Joey (Favreau) and Lucy (Kristin Davis of “Sex and the City”), and just-separated Shane (Faizon Love) and his ridiculously young new girlfriend Trudy (scene-stealing Kali Hawk) – to join them on a retreat to the Club Med-style resort of Eden. If they can get a group of four couples together, they can all go half-price – which sounds great to the three seemingly healthy couples, as long as they’re assured they won’t have to go through couples counseling.
And so they arrive in what seems like paradise, and of course, everyone is subjected to counseling from the get-go. It turns out that Eden is no mere resort, but strictly follows a program by Marcel (Jean Reno) that forces couples to get deep with each other in addition to following regimented diet, sleep and yoga regimens. And this unexpected rigor sets the couples off, opening up about unresolved issues each never knew the other had.
With the hilarious team of Vaughn and Favreau firing on all cylinders again after their cult-classic teamings in “Swingers” and “Made,” the early stretches at the resort are filled with hilariously sarcastic dialogue that takes well-placed swipes at the sappy, New Age-y relationship advice dispensed far too often in our culture. Seeing these guys fight for their right to be guys while their wives awaken to the fact they have their own reasons to complain rather than simply accept their husbands’ bad habits and passive neglect makes for a sharp take on modern relationships.

There’s also a gloriously offensive sequence in which the resort’s yoga instructor (the brilliant Carlos Ponce) guides the couples – but especially the ladies – through a series of shockingly inappropriate positions and thrusts that offers some of the funniest film moments of the year. But when Trudy disappears from the married part of the resort, apparently relocating to the singles part of the island to get her freak on with her own age group, the couples all have to come together to sneak her back onto their part of the resort or face early expulsion. Here we’re promised a series of comical misadventures, but instead the film strangely pulls its punches and winds up devolving into a series of pat resolutions.
Following his star turns in a pair of slipshod Christmas comedies (the bizarre “Fred Claus” and the cliched yet funny “Four Christmases”) it’s clear that Vaughn’s trying to steer himself back on course with “Retreat.” Not only did he co-write it with Favreau, but as producer he’s sprinkled the film with his patented fast patter and hired another lifelong friend, former child actor Peter Billingsley (the immortal Ralphie from “A Christmas Story”) as director. Vaughn also has the class to depict his middle-class, middle-aged Middle Americans with respect.
In other words, the success or failure of “Couples Retreat” rests squarely on Vaughn’s shoulders. He’s a steady and reliable purveyor of comedy, but rarely makes a stretch in his acting persona. How much you like the film will largely depend on how much you like your comedy served up: if you like familiar comfort food, you’ll be just fine. But if you want something with a truly fresh flavor, you might be disappointed.





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16 Comments
WHY DOES OBAMA HAVE HIS OWN CHURCH? Does he think he is God?
http://myfreepress.net/2009/10/09/obamas-church-i...
Way to go OT in the first comment, Jason. Sheesh.
I. love. Malin. Akerman. Teamed with Vince, I could see some serious laugh potential.
I like the actors but will wait for the DVD release. It is much more a finacial decision than a taste one.
I'll see this. You had me at Favreau and Vaughn. I have enormous good will for all the other actors in this movie as well, esp. Jason Bateman, for some reason.
This review has me leaning towards seeing it now. I'm just sort of getting tired of Jason Batemen because much like Michael Cera he isn't really an actor as he is a character that has shown up in too many films.
I'm a Vince Vaughn and Jon Favreau fan, and I went to high school with Carlos Ponce, so I'm definitely going to check this one out.
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vince makes me laugh. on that qualification alone, i plan on seeing this movie.
My tickets are already purchased for tonight for a movie grill showing. There's no better way to enjoy a movie with Vaughn than have a burger and beer to go with it.
My tickets are already purchased for a movie grill showing tonight. There's no better way to enjoy a movie with Vaughn than have a burger and beer to go with it.
It would be a lot more believable if Favreau did not have more succulent breasts than the woman playing his wife.
I saw it at a screening last week and thought it was definitely admission-price worthy. I liked very much that it was a comedy about average couples. It didn't poke fun at their problems or their middle american lives with any judgement. Nor did it infuse any political agenda at all. It was a fun romp on Bora Bora with a bunch of characters I identified with from both my own marriage and those of my circle of friends, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Not an award winner for sure but a nice comedic diversion in a glorious location.
I like Favreau, Vaughn , and Bateman, but lately they've been more bland than I care for. As if they don't trust enough of us to "get" the kind of humor that made them famous (Swingers, AD, etc). Bateman's "extract" this summer was a disappointment. Like this review, satisfying, but nothing special.
Wow. finally a movie where some of the married couples (dare I say it) like each other and some are actually trying to save their marriages rather than just throw in the towel after the first affair! How refreshing.
I like Vince Vaughn and most of the cast. I plan on seeing this for a little light hilarity.
Not me. I am going to wait for the movie that will be based on the musical derived from this film. But I will probably watch that movie on my laptop, using heavy base speakers.
What was the song that was playing during the club scene on eden east
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