Crude, daft and hilarious, Dodgeball is the best mainstream American comedy in years.
Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:154
Fresh:107
Rotten:47
Average Rating:6.3/10
Consensus: Cheerfully sloppy, dumb fun.
Runtime: 1 hr 36 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: Remember your childhood fears – perhaps born on your local playgrounds– of a red rubber ball hurtling towards your head? Or the sweet taste of revenge when you threw it right back at the class... Remember your childhood fears – perhaps born on your local playgrounds– of a red rubber ball hurtling towards your head? Or the sweet taste of revenge when you threw it right back at the class bully? Well, get ready to once again dodge, duck, dip and dive…dodgeball is back, and this time it’s not just for the schoolyard. Dodgeball is becoming a cultural phenomenon. Adult dodgeball leagues are springing up in major cities, Vanity Fair called the game the “It Sport,” and The New York Times and Fortune recently heralded the sport’s re-emergence. So the time is ripe for a poignant motion picture that brings dignity and respect to the world of competitive dodgeball. A tale in the tradition of great films about legendary sports heroes. An emotionally stirring look at the thrills of victory and the heartbreaks of defeat. We’ll let you know when that movie is made. In the meantime, we have DODGEBALL: A TRUE UNDERDOG STORY, a film that grabs life by the ball. The story’s protagonist, Peter LaFleur (Vince Vaughn), is a charismatic underachiever and proprietor of a rundown gym called Average Joe’s. The facility’s clientele of decidedly less-than-“average Joes” is made up of a self-styled pirate, a scrawny nerd who dreams of impressing an unattainable cheerleader, an obsessive aficionado of obscure sports, a dim-witted young man, and a cocky know-it-all who, of course, really knows nothing. Peter’s humble gym catches the eye of White Goodman (Ben Stiller), the power-mullet-sporting, Fu-Manchu-d, egomaniacal owner of Globo Gym, a gleaming monolith of fitness. White intends to take over Average Joe’s, and Peter’s non-existent bookkeeping is making it all too easy for him. A foreclosing bank has stationed attorney Kate Veatch (Christine Taylor) inside Average Joe’s to finalize Globo’s takeover of the gym. But Peter’s boyish charms win her over and Kate joins his team of social rejects to beat the odds – and their own ineptitude – to try to save Average Joe’s. How? A showdown dodgeball competition against Globo Gym. “Finally,” says DODGEBALL: A TRUE UNDERDOG STORY producer/star Ben Stiller, with tongue planted at least a little in cheek, “there is a real dodgeball film that doesn’t pull any punches and really shows the pain and humiliation associated with having a ball slam you in the face, in front of lots of people.” Stiller’s on-screen nemesis, Vince Vaughn, sees amidst the film’s raucous comedy, a universal tale of honor. “It’s about people who don’t fit in a traditional way, who come together and find self-respect and something – their gym – worth defending. Dodgeball becomes a vehicle for them to learn some life lessons and stand up for themselves.” Honor? Life lessons? Perhaps. But one thing is certain: DODGEBALL: A TRUE UNDERDOG STORY blazes new trails in motion picture history. Which is to say, it is the first major studio feature film on the subject. “A dodgeball movie is uncharted film territory,” says Rawson Marshall Thurber, the film’s writer/director, “but at the same time it inhabits the same tradition of great underdog movies like ‘Stripes,’ ‘The Bad News Bears’ and ‘Meatballs,’ which follow an archetypal comedy framework: scrappy underdogs take on the socially, financially or athletically gifted and prevail against all odds.” [More]
Starring: Vince Vaughn, Ben Stiller, Christine Taylor, Rip Torn
Starring: Vince Vaughn, Ben Stiller, Christine Taylor, Rip Torn, Jason Bateman, Gary Cole, Missi Pyle, Stephen Root, Justin Long, Chris Williams, Alan Tudyk, Hank Azaria, Joel Moore
Director: Rawson Marshall Thurber
Director: Rawson Marshall Thurber
Screenwriter: Rawson Marshall Thurber
Producer: Ben Stiller, Stuart Cornfeld
Composer: Theodore Shapiro
Studio: 20th Century Fox
Reviews for Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story
Stiller gives one of his broadest and best performances to date, and the jokes ping around the screen as fast as the balls on the court.
This is funny stuff, not quite on par with Zoolander, but well worth a look.
It helps to have energetic and gifted actors, but you really need to give them funnier things to do and say.
You have to respect a movie that wears its shortcomings proudly on its sleeve
An enjoyable Friday night comedy that delivers several decent laugh-out loud gags, even if it’s not the movie it could have been with a more thought-out script.
Zoolander fans will love every minute of this movie. The rest of us can wait until it comes out on video.
This is not a stupid comedy. A comedy with this many elements has to be smartly structured and blended.
The fusion of violence and silliness makes dodgeball a great subject for a sports comedy, and the Vaughn/Stiller team is casting perfection.
Entertaining, in the way that encourages maximum brain disengagement.
This is definitely how to make a good stupid movie: accept the stupidity, own it, and then have fun with it.
The jokes fly as wildly as the titular sports gear, landing solidly more often than you'd expect thanks to a fast-paced script and a cast of good-natured misfits led by Vince Vaughn and Ben Stiller.
Rambunctious when it finally gets to Las Vegas, where the championships are held and broadcast on not-real-yet ESPN 8 -- 'the Ocho.'
I dare anyone not to laugh when the balls start boinking off bodies in this smart 'dumb comedy,' which hits its targets more often than not.
A comedy with a crazy bounce, but only if you’re willing to dodge the dumb, dodgy jokes.
There really isn't enough there to cover for the clichés, making Dodgeball intermittently funny at best, an overlong comedy sketch at worst.
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