It's not a boy's game anymore, says The Heat director Paul Feig (Freaks and Geeks, Bridesmaids). So who can fill the seats for the first female buddy cop movie ever - Bullock & McCarthy - comic heavyweights pushing the boundaries of a new element to the buddy cop genre that's long overdue. In her feature film debut, screenwriter Katie Dippold (Parks and Recreation) puts it out there with her uproarious screenplay, but it ultimately takes two heavyweights to get the job done.
Calculated FBI Special Agent Sarah Ashburn (Sandra Bullock) is forcibly teamed with a tough Irish Detective Shannon Mullins (Melissa McCarthy) to bring down a Russian mobster in Boston. McCarthy cruises the streets in her beat up classic Rambler, busting down doors, and busting up perps. She's a bonafide movie star, Boston-drifting with Bullock, who got her training in 1994 on Speed - shot calling them all. Their contrasting methods of catching smooth criminals causes some issues for the agent and detective, who slowly find their buddy cop bond. Melissa McCarthy and Sandra Bullock's comic timing together is impeccable in The Heat, and they flow off of each other like poetry in motion. It's real comedy, not fluff, with an old school vibe. The cast also includes SNL and MADtv alumni who are cast against type, very cleverly.
The Heat delivers the action, comedy, and drama, and prove to studio execs that you don't need Willis, or Rogen, or Don Johnson and his loafers. Buddy cop's work when the screenplay is genuinely funny and the buddies have instant chemistry that bleeds off the screen, mainly because there is no male/female interest (just person's of interest). Pretty soon we can just remove the "female" attachment to the name, and call the next film a "buddy cop." The Heat is breaking new ground. It's the kind of comedy that needs to be happening right now, and this is the future of comedy. Screenwriter Katie Dippold is making a name for herself, and I smell a part 2. This is no chick flick - but you can bring your chick if you want to guys.
Calculated FBI Special Agent Sarah Ashburn (Sandra Bullock) is forcibly teamed with a tough Irish Detective Shannon Mullins (Melissa McCarthy) to bring down a Russian mobster in Boston. McCarthy cruises the streets in her beat up classic Rambler, busting down doors, and busting up perps. She's a bonafide movie star, Boston-drifting with Bullock, who got her training in 1994 on Speed - shot calling them all. Their contrasting methods of catching smooth criminals causes some issues for the agent and detective, who slowly find their buddy cop bond. Melissa McCarthy and Sandra Bullock's comic timing together is impeccable in The Heat, and they flow off of each other like poetry in motion. It's real comedy, not fluff, with an old school vibe. The cast also includes SNL and MADtv alumni who are cast against type, very cleverly.
The Heat delivers the action, comedy, and drama, and prove to studio execs that you don't need Willis, or Rogen, or Don Johnson and his loafers. Buddy cop's work when the screenplay is genuinely funny and the buddies have instant chemistry that bleeds off the screen, mainly because there is no male/female interest (just person's of interest). Pretty soon we can just remove the "female" attachment to the name, and call the next film a "buddy cop." The Heat is breaking new ground. It's the kind of comedy that needs to be happening right now, and this is the future of comedy. Screenwriter Katie Dippold is making a name for herself, and I smell a part 2. This is no chick flick - but you can bring your chick if you want to guys.
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