
‘Lazy’  has been the word of choice thrown around when talking about Warner  Bros. latest comedy “Horrible Bosses,” and quite frankly I agree.  That  word should be used to describe many movies this year, with studios  lining up A-list stars, 3D visuals, or promises of raunchy, fun humor –  only to take your money and leave you with an “it was fine” reaction.   “Horrible Bosses” is continuing this taking advantage of movie fans  trend by over promising and under delivering.
 If I listed the named actors in the cast – Jennifer Aniston, Kevin Spacey, Jason Bateman, Colin Farrell, Jason Sudeikis, Donald  Sutherland – it would seem really impressive.  But if I listed the  amount of jokes you will actually laugh at, the excitement level would  hit rock bottom.I personally like the premise of these three guys (Bateman, Sudeikis, Charlie Day) being treated badly and plotting to do something so dark as to kill each other’s bosses (Spacey, Farrell, Aniston). It sets up for a goofball, good time, popcorn comedy with some big stars playing these over-the-top, villainous bosses. The pieces are there for a good summer escape, and the trailer (seen below) supports this theory.
But  the full-length movie itself reads a lot differently.  Within the first  five minutes of Charlie Day screaming his lines, as if the louder he  said them the funnier they would be, I started to check out.  I began to  enjoy the woman next to me devouring her popcorn like a cow more than  the wink and nod jokes on display in front of me. 
The  issue for me lies in relating to the movie in any way.  Even in a  comedy that teases Jennifer Aniston saying dirty things, you need  someone to root for and relate to – murder plot aside.  Think about  being out with your friends.  The funny one in the group isn’t  necessarily funny because he tells good jokes; he’s funny because his  reaction to real-life situations makes him funny.  There is no one to  root for or relate to in this movie, because you learn nothing about  them except that they hate their bosses.  That word ‘lazy’ is creeping  in now.  This leaves the actors with nothing else to do except tell you  jokes instead of making you laugh as you live through this crazy plan  with them.Aniston, Spacey and Farrell do their jobs and do them well. Aniston on the surface is a nympho-maniac dentist who, you can imagine, is probably more lonley than she lets on; Spacey – a jealous, egomaniac who thinks he rules the world; Ferrell – a spoiled brat with a cocaine problem; Now, if I had to explain the main three characters, I couldn’t. They are so simple, and lazily written and developed, it’s almost like the writers and director Seth Gordon figured three comedic actors would just fill in the gaps and make it work. It also makes the movie as a whole seem like an empty shell of a comedy – clunky and disconnected by the script and direction.
There are some legitimate laughs in “Horrible Bosses” and I should give credit to them. The movie delivers some punches of good jokes scattered throughout, but overall it’s just not enough to make “Horrible Bosses” worth the ticket price.
