And on all of these fronts the thing succeeds more than handily - Liam Neeson sends up his work as a grizzled lone man of action and maps it beautifully into the legacy of Frank Drebin; Pamela Anderson offers a similarly funny take on the femme fatale rife in neo-noir.
But this thing gets extra oomph from some surprising emotional affect, a split second in which Neeson lets us see Drebin, the out-of-time out-of-bounds lone wolf, squaring up for a kick-ass action scene...and deciding firmly to kill no one before fighting his way through. Some will suggest I'm overthinking/emoting here but this absolutely squares with the fundamentally decent humanism that radiates from Schaffer in his gentle interviews as well as his no-holds-barred podcast with The Lonely Island and Seth Meyers. And this lovely crystalline moment, too, folds in perfectly with the non-stop comic onslaught of the film as a whole. The movie never slows down long enough to make a show of its considerable heart; it just beats with the same effortless timing as everything else in it.
(Parenthetically, fans still longing for yet another Lonely Island video after SNL50 absolutely get one here with the "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" sequence.)


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