Drillbit Taylor
Starring: Owen Wilson, Troy
Gentile, Nate Hartley
Directed by: Steven Brill (“Little Nicky”)
Written by: Kristofor Brown (debut) and Seth
Rogan (“Superbad”)
By
Kiko Martinez
If it was
the goal of teen actors Troy Gentile and Nate Hartley to
forever be known as the pocket-sized versions of Jonah
Hill and Michael Cera, then congratulations. The new
comedy “Drillbit Taylor” is “Superbad”-lite with fewer
laughs and a lot more Owen Wilson that we actually
needed to see.
At its core,
“Drillbit” is a story about nerds, a comedy goldmine if
done correctly (TV’s short-lived “Freaks and Geeks,”
another produced work by Judd Apatow, is an example).
But when forced into flat scenes and relying on
unmemorable characters, someone’s bound to wish Arnold
Poindexter or Paul Pfeiffer would make a quick cameo.
Alas, they
do not and we are left with a trio of lame ducks in Wade
(Hartley), Ryan (Gentile), and Emmitt (David Dorfman,
the little kid from “The Ring,” who seems to have fallen
victim to the Haley Joel Osment-hit-puberty-and-get-butt-ugly-syndrome).
Emmitt is a sort-of third-wheel character like McLovin
if McLovin was a spaz who liked showtunes.
The film
opens as BFFs Wade and Ryan are getting ready to start
their freshman year of high school. Believing that this
is their time to shine, the boys make a promise to
themselves that they will no longer be viewed as dorks
or feel inapt when talking to the opposite sex. Ryan
even gives himself a new nickname, T-Dog, to start the
year off a new man.
Not even
within five minutes of stepping inside the school,
however, Wade and Ryan are singled out by Filkins (Alex
Frost), a psychotic bully, and his henchman Ronnie (Josh
Peck of Nickelodeon’s “Drake & Josh”…shiver). After a
few weeks of being humiliated by the goons, who are
written way too exaggeratedly by Kristofor Brown and
Seth Rogan, the boys decide to hire a bodyguard to
protect them from any more torture.
In steps
Drillbit Taylor (Wilson), a self-proclaimed military
hero and bodyguard to the stars. Actually, Drillbit is
really a compulsive liar and homeless man living in the
woods and hustling for change with his bum friends. When
he sees an opportunity to make some extra cash by
swindling some desperate kids, he doesn’t hesitate.
Since he seems legit (but mostly because he is the only
bodyguard the kids can afford), Drillbit gets the job
and assures the boys they are now under his wing.
Pretending to be a teacher at their school, Drillbit has
no real intention of living up to his job description.
He’s too busy flirting in the teacher’s lounge with a
cute English teacher (played by Apatow’s real leading
lady Leslie Mann, who is sadly underused).
Although the first half hour or so brings some steady
laughs, when the boys match wits with Drillbit is where
the picture suffers. This is the type of character where
Wilson should flourish, but when heaved into a clutter
of implausible personas and loopy writing “Drillbit
Taylor” isn’t this year’s comedy gem we all know Apatow
has delivered before. Grade: C