The Cobbler (DVD REVIEW)
The
Cobbler
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Adam Sandler Experiment in Magical Realism Released on DVD
Max (Adam
Sandler) is the fourth generation in a long line of cobblers whose family tree
can be traced all the way back to a business founded by his great-grandfather
Pinchas Simkin (Donnie Keshawarz) in Eastern Europe
in the 19th Century. Max presently plies his trade in a modest shoe
repair shop located on Manhattan’s Lower East Side.
The bashful bachelor still lives at home and
dotes on his elderly mother (Lynn Cohen) once he gets off work. He’s never
dated, but that doesn’t stop him from ogling attractive passersby while eating
pickles on the street with Jimmy (Steve Buscemi), the barber who runs the
establishment next-door.
Max’s fortunes change the
day a neighborhood bully (Method Man) enters the store and demands that his
alligator shoes’ damaged soles be sewn on the spot. When Max balks because his
stitching machine is broken, menacing Ludlow
gives him until the end of day, or else.
After Ludlow storms out, Max ventures into the
basement where he finds an antique stitcher which’ll do in a pinch. He repairs
the tattered, size10½s and slips them on, since his feet just happen to be the
same size.
Lo and behold, Max gets the
shock of his life when he magically morphs into Ludlow. Then, he starts trying on other
customers’ shoes, too, and turns into the owner each time.
Curious, Max decides to
test this newfound ability to literally walk in another man’s moccasins. He
proceeds to make a mess everywhere he goes, even upsetting his mother by
walking into the house looking exactly like her long-lost husband (Dustin
Hoffman) after donning a pair of his penny loafers.
Written and directed by
Thomas McCarthy, The Cobbler has to be considered a big disappointment, given
the high expectations set by his impressive earlier offerings which include The
Station Agent, Up, Win Win, The Visitor and Million Dollar Arm. Unfortunately,
the fatal design flaw here rests with casting, since Adam Sandler tends to fall
flat in a flick if he isn’t going full retard, ala his most successful outings
as The Waterboy, Happy Gilmore and Billy Madison.
Sorry, Sandler simply isn’t
very convincing playing a character with an I.Q.
above room temperature.
Fair (1 star)
PG-13
for violence, profanity and partial nudity
In
English and Yiddish with subtitles
Running
time: 98 minutes
Distributor:
RLJ / Image Entertainment
DVD
Extras: The Making of The Cobbler; and the theatrical trailer.
To
see a trailer for The Cobbler, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xQGpDi5mM-4
To
order The Cobbler on DVD, visit:
No comments:
Post a Comment