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Big Nothing

Big Nothing (2006)

December. 01,2006
|
6.7
|
R
| Action Comedy Thriller Crime

A frustrated, unemployed teacher joins forces with a scammer and his girlfriend in a blackmailing scheme.

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Reviews

ashwin-avasarala
2006/12/01

I saw this movie yesterday, and I must say I was impressed. Where do i start? The music, the cinematography, the plot or the acting? Well the music was delightful. A little different from what you usually hear running in the background. The cinematography is simply superb, whether it is the choice of colors or background or the usage of split screens or just the swift movement of camera. The actors did a good job. All actors played their characters convincingly, especially Simon Pegg. The plot. Oh My GOD!. After a long time have I come across a plot like this, with so many twists and turns that it just keeps getting wackier every minute. You get so involved in the plot, that you feel sad when.....I'll leave the rest for you to watch :)

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Jay Harris
2006/12/02

IMDb rightfully says I must have at least 10 lines,This maybe could have been a better movie. if ALL all the following things occurred..Better writing,better acting, better production values & most important better Editing.The director was Jean-Baptiste Andrea. He also co-wrote the convoluted,confusing not even one bit mildly amusing script.Compounding this unfunny so-called comedy of errors,is the running time, It runs 80 minutes before 5 minutes of credits, This 80 minutes seem like twice the length.The film features David Schwimmer, David usually performs well, not in this mess though. Simon Pegg who usually shines in a role is dreadfully miscast. Alice Eve is the top billed actress here. Jon Polito a fine character actor is not good at all.The rest of cast is of same quality.The title is most appropriate:BIG NOTHINGThis was made in Jan 2006, & just had its first US release on DVD July 2009. It did have a disastrous theatre run in the UK. one weekend in 2007 in 106 houses.This is not even worth a showing on TV .Ratinggs: 1/2* out of 4 --15 points out of 100---IMDB- 1 out or 10

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johnnyboyz
2006/12/03

Big Nothing draws on inspiration from Sam Raimi's 1998 film A Simple Plan, among other things, as it follows this everyday and seemingly ordinary working class guy get involved in a noir inspired dream situation. It's the sort of situation that could, and in fact very much does, quickly become the absolute opposite – a noir inspired nightmare. This is achieved through a chain of events that, unlike A Simple Plan, draw on the post-Tarantino ideation of very black humour delivered through a variety of scenes that revolve around death, destruction and humour. I don't think the film is as good as A Simple Plan, if only for the fact A Simple Plan felt more grounded and was more subtle in its development and fleshing out of its characters and predicaments; but Big Nothing is a nourishing and devilishly good ride of genre basics and bleak but effective writing.The film sees three relatively hapless leads, predominantly in David Schwimmer's Charlie but additionally in Simon Pegg's Gus and Alice Eve's 'Miss Teen Oklahoma' character named Josie McBroom. Charlie, a smart and educated man, gets what he perceives as a low-end job as a call centre worker to support his state trooper wife Penelope (McElhone) and young daughter. His work station neighbours that of Gus, a fast talking and smooth guy out to blackmail a local priest who, he claims, has a history of visiting certain websites he shouldn't have done. One night, Gus shares this plan with total stranger Charlie in a bar, but upon overhearing this plan, third lead Josie gets in on the act as the ever-obligatory, but in a nice sense, femme fatale.There are a few things in the opening that raise eyebrows, but tactfully so. The casting of essentially British acting talent in Pegg and Eve, even if they're playing Americans, to act as foils to Schwimmer is a cute notion in the sense it's using whatever unease or uncertainty might lie in the relationship between Britain and America precisely for this film as a means of noir-inspired entertainment. The film has its characters act in a deliberately care-free and somewhat daft manner, most evidently when Charlie thinks he puts a customer on hold, insults them and then realises they were not on hold and the supervisor heard the whole thing. If you don't see that coming after Gus executes it moments earlier, flawlessly, then you're not trying hard enough. Charlie and Gus then go on to discuss what will be the film's initial incident in a very public place; something that leads to the latching on of Josie. Things go wrong in the early section, but it acts as a means to get across a certain degree of incompetence on the character's behalf; that these people are not suited for the task they're taking on. The film knowingly pays homage to its own set up when one character points out that two others may well have been reading 'Blackmail for Dummies'.The presence of Charlie's partner Penelope, as this character of law enforcement, initially acts against the film; as an element that you feel will become rather obviously involved when her husband takes up illegal activity. But she's kept away from the narrative for most of the time and adopts a role as an off screen presence, forever threatening. If the writers for this project have taken inspiration from anything in regards to her particular character, then it is the calm; methodical and delicate archetype of Fargo's Marge Gunderson, as a figure of good but vulnerability amongst all the evil and wrong-doing that surrounds her. The film is littered with characters that are eliminated just as easily as they are introduced; fast and loose lines of dialogue, spat like venom on the characters' behalf, a particular favourite of mine being a spin on the overly familiar "read my lips......." phrase.So if we learn anything from this, it's that 'Tarantino knock offs' or films inspired by Tarantino's ever-moulded together mesh of crime and comedy can work quite well. Big Nothing isn't a film that makes crime particularly appealing, or even sexy despite its frenetic and entertaining aesthetic, as much as it does make the prospect of getting into crime quite alluring as this seemingly fool-proof and straight forward plan spirals more and more out of control. The film isn't a glorification of crime, one particular character's downfall is brought on by an attack of guilt and realisation of who he is and what he has, but more importantly what he has to loose, while the quite tragic epilogue acts as a means of hammering home the point.The whole situation is practically uphill from the moment Charlie disposes of a body that he thought was dead but wasn't quite, resulting in a series of scenes involving either death or total bewilderment, often both coming to the forefront at once and giving us a comedic spin. Big Nothing is a twisted but frighteningly good time. It provides more than enough in the basics for both noir and comedy, as genres, for a recommendation, and delivers this with an entertaining narrative that comes complete with twists and turns. The film zips along, without ever feeling overpowering, nor that particularly bad.

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charlytully
2006/12/04

Hey, folks, this is a "black comedy." So what could be funnier than BIG NOTHING's execution-style slaying of a diabetic law enforcement officer by force-feeding him sugar until he convulses and croaks? Sure, I have a close relative with diabetes, and an in-law who passed away from the disease last week, but--holy moly!--this is JUST a movie: a dark spoof. Since BIG NOTHING made almost 84,000 pounds (which sure sounds like a lot of honey--oops, money) in its country of origin (the United Kingdom), BIG NOTHING 2 surely is in the offing, and the laughs will have to be even FUNNIER! Which leaves the filmmakers with a real dilemma, since all the funny people died in Part One (and Simon Pegg does not want to do another zombie flick). Therefore, since they'll need (probably lesser) replacement actors, the sick jokes must be EVEN MORE OUTRAGEOUS. Well, BN-I refers to Stephen Hawking, shows the cover of his book (A BRIEF HISTORY OF TIME), and thanks him TWICE in the credits. BN-I also features a snippet from a (hopefully fake) male-on-female snuff film. Which raises the possibility of ALS jokes, wheel-chair-down-the-stairs humor, and celebrity snuff! I'd go on, but it might be construed as aiding and abetting already-warped minds.

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