Film review | Horrible Bosses – Nine to Five meets Strangers on a Train as wage slaves try to whack the creeps on top

Horrible Bosses - Jason Bateman, Charlie Day & Jason Sudeikis

Nine to Five meets Strangers on a Train, farcical comedy Horrible Bosses revolves around a trio of hapless wage slaves who are so fed up with their respective bosses-from-hell that they decide to bump them off.

Jason Bateman’s hard-working desk jockey Nick is sick of being pushed around by corporate tyrant Kevin Spacey; Jason Sudeikis’s conscientious accountant Kurt can’t stand seeing his company’s greedy, coked-up new owner bleeding the firm dry (a sleazy Colin Farrell, almost unrecognisable beneath a hideous comb-over); while mild dental assistant Dale (Charlie Day) has had enough of fending off the unwelcome advances of nymphomaniac dentist Jennifer Aniston. After taking some dodgy advice from a street hustler (a scene-sealing Jamie Foxx), the threesome form a pact to kill one another’s boss, but putting the plan into action is another matter…

Horrible Bosses - Charlie Day & Jennifer Aniston

The would-be assassins’ hopelessly bungling efforts produce a steady supply of laughs, though the jokes are often extremely rude and crude and the meandering plot doesn’t make the most of the film’s set-up. (Danny De Vito’s darkly comic 1987 directorial debut Throw Momma from the Train was much better at giving a comic spin to the Strangers on a Train murder-swap premise).

Fortunately, the actors rise above the script. Day’s shrieky performance is irritating, admittedly, but Bateman underplays beautifully and Spacey, Farrell and Anniston totally nail their despicable characters – Aniston, in particular, has enormous fun playing her perma-tanned man-eater, vamping it up in a role that couldn’t be further removed from the perky rom-com heroines she usually plays.

On general release from 22nd July.

If you can see this, then you might need a Flash Player upgrade or you need to install Flash Player if it's missing. Get Flash Player from Adobe.

To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.
This entry was posted in Cinema Releases, Reviews, The Best View and tagged , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>