Chips
DVD
Review by Kam Williams
Raunchy
Adaptation of Classic TV Series Arrives on Home Video
Whenever
a classic television series is made into a movie, the buzz always
seems to be about whether the screen version will be a creative
variation on the theme or merely a campy, cornball,
take-the-money-and-run ripoff trading in familiar formulas and
shopworn cliches. After all, for every inspired adaptation like
Batman (1989), Charlie's Angels (2000) and 21 Jump Street (2012)
there are just as many bitter disappointments, al a Dragnet (1987),
I Spy (2002) and Get Smart (2008).
Fortunately,
Chips is more in league with the worthwhile remakes rather than the
ones leaving you wondering why they ever bothered. The picture was
ostensibly a labor of Dax
Shepard who wrote, directed, produced and also
co-stars in it opposite Michael Pena. They play California Highway
Patrol Officers Ponch Poncherello and Jon Baker, the same characters
popularized on TV by Erik Estrada and Larry Willcox.
The
original, airing for a half dozen seasons starting in 1977, was a
buddy action drama basically revolving around the heroic exploits of
a couple of mismatched motorcycle cops, with Ponch often going rogue,
much to the chagrin of his relatively-straitlaced partner. This
go-round, the script has been flipped, so that Jon is more of a
misfit. At the point of departure, we find him getting a probationary
badge and graduating from the police academy only because Sergeant
Hernandez (Maya Rudolph) takes pity on him.
They're
both going through difficult divorces, although Jon is desperate to
win back his wife (Kristen Bell). He hopes she'll be impressed by his
transition into a safer line of work after an accident-prone career
as a professional motorcross bike racer.
He's
soon teamed with the veteran Ponch to solve a rash of armored car
robberies suspected of being pulled off by a gang of crooked cops.
They proceed to make a mess of the investigation at every turn, which
only makes their terminally-exasperated boss (Isiah Whitlock, Jr.)
repeatedly blow his cork.
However,
there's little reason to pay attention to the
intermittently-incoherent plot, for this kitchen sink comedy's raison
d'etre is to generate laughs by any means necessary. To that end, the
politically-incorrect bottom feeder easily earns its R rating via an
incessant indulgence in scatological, ethnic, sexist, slapstick,
bodily function and gay panic fare.
A vulgar but funny enough departure from the classic TV series to
warrant recommending.
Very
Good (3 stars)
Rated R
for crude humor, graphic sexuality, frontal nudity, violence, drug
use and pervasive profanity
Running time: 100
minutes
Distributor: Warner
Brothers Home Entertainment Group
To see a trailer for Chips, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0IfqqUTW-i4
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