Please Woody, make "Anything Else" but this!

by Eric Melin on September 26, 2003

in Print Reviews

This latest Woody Allen misfire features Jason Biggs in the lead role of a neurotic joke writer and Christina Ricci as his oddball girlfriend. Their rocky relationship from beginning to end is chronicled with all the newness of an REO Speedwagon song.

Allen has mined this same set up for many movies before, but the similarities between “Anything Else” and his best-known movie, 1977’s “Annie Hall,” are too many. This new movie literally feels like it is 25 years old, like some Allen wannabee might have scraped this together on the heels of “Hall“‘s success.

Maybe somebody who has never seen a Woody Allen movie would feel differently than me. I was prepared for, and was willing to forgive, Biggs doing his best Allen impersonation. What I wasn’t prepared for was how forced and trite it all seemed coming out of Biggs’ mouth. Somehow Woody is able to make selfish nebbish-ness funny, but it isn’t working well for Biggs in “Anything Else.”

Am I really supposed to believe that Biggs and Ricci’s characters would debate the merits of listening to Billie Holiday on 78 vinyl records over CDs? It’s a quaint and silly notion to think these young people as old-fashioned as Allen that they embrace no part of modern culture whatsoever.

As far as the dialogue goes, however, “Anything Else” is still wittier than 80 percent of all comedies out there today. It’s not a young romance story all wrapped up in a bundle of hot new hit singles and shallow sappiness. And it doesn’t look like a TV commercial starring the next-big-thing hot model/actor.

Instead, it’s like a stale cracker that doesn’t taste too terrible, as long as you were really hungry anyway.

Eric is the Editor-in-Chief of Scene-Stealers.com, a Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic, and contributor for The Pitch. He’s former President of the KCFCC, and drummer for The Dead Girls, Ultimate Fakebook, and Truck Stop Love . He is also the 2013 Air Guitar World Champion Mean Melin, ranked 4th best of all-time. Eric goes to 11. Follow him at:

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