Now I am sure that you
heard the story about the old woman who lived in a shoe. But did you know that
before this silly cow moved into an item of footwear, she lived in a leather
jock-strap? Honestly, straight up, these guys and girls told me. Director:
Shawn Levy; and Actors: Steve Martin, Hillary Duff, Tom Welling, and Bonnie
Hunt. They told it to me in 2003, and it took them about 98 minutes.
Cheaper By The Dozen : The Film - The Book
Cheaper By The Dozen : The Film - The Book
THE STORY:
After all of the years living together as very
affectionate husband and wife, both Tom and Kate Baker (Steve Martin and Bonnie
Hunt), are suddenly really going places with their respective careers. Tom has
finally found his golden job, as a coach to a big league football team, prompting
him and his family to move away from their countryside home, and into a house
within the city. Whilst Kate has been offered a publishing deal to promote her
new book too, called 'Cheaper by the Dozen', prompting her to travel to New
York City for a week or so, so that she can
sell-sell-sell.
However, what do their kids think about this? Their twelve
kids. And will Tom be able to cope with them all on his own? Especially now he
has to juggle his high profile work and his high maintenance children, both at
the same time.
Maybe his eldest daughter, Nora (Piper Perabo), who lives
with her actor / boyfriend, Hank (Ashton Kutcher), can help him out? No - not
really - Tom's brats see to that. Well what about his next two eldest children
then, Charlie and Lorraine (Tom
Welling and Hillary Duff), because they do live under the same roof? No -
afraid not - they are having a bit of a rough time fitting in to their new
surroundings at the moment.
OK, so what does Tom do, huh? Is he able to balance his home
life and his work life in relative harmony?
Simple put - no.
You see, due to his newfound work load, Tom just can not
seem be at two places at once, leaving his children feeling neglected, and
leaving him feeling frustrated with his job. Worst still, is that his kids hate
their new home, hate their new school, and basically hate how things are
turning out, with their Mum away.
Now eventually, over time, this very strained situation gets
even more dire, when Tom tries to take his work home with him, inadvertently
making things between him and his children blow up in his face, BOOM! His kid's
starts rebel. He starts to falter in his job. Plus his wife gets wind that
things on the home front, are not what Tom tells her on the phone.
Still, that is most probably why what next transpires is a
right family affair, huh? As Oprah comes a calling - a child goes a
bawling - a family comes together - and a union grows stronger in harsher
weather.
THE REVIEW:
Do you know what? There are a couple of quite surprising
facts surrounding 'Cheaper by the Dozen'. For example: (1) This film was very
loosely based on a real life family, called the 'Gilbreth', whom wrote a book by the
same name, which was made into a 50's movie by the same name too. (2) Both
Steve Martin and Bonnie Hunt do not have any children in real life. And (3)
Steve was very happy to play a character called 'Tom Baker', because he is an
old school 'Dr Who' fan.
Now another thing that is also surprising about this film as
well, is how its basic pretext is presented just like a stray family member, in
both style, content, and structure.
You see, in essence, this flick is a rollercoaster ride of a
fun family adventure, with a diverse set of children, a bold and obvious
story-line, and a play it by numbers tale that is neglected like a
child within a large family unit. Honestly, at times this film just flimflams
between the different children and the parents so much, that the basic arc of
the larger tale does get lost within the scheme of things. Moreover, some of
the sub-plots are not fleshed out that well either, and just come across as
filler within a ninety minute gap.
Thankfully, though, on a more positive note, also just like
a family member, there is warmth within 'Cheaper by the Dozen' too. On
occasion, some of the more dramatic and poignant scenes were played out with a
nice amount of emotion -- which did manage to bring a tear to my eye or a smile to
my face here and there. And in addition to this, I really have to commend all
the cast - including the brats - because they were all very good as single
faceted characters.
Now my own personal favorites where the little mites are
concerted, is that little sod with the glasses (because there was pathos to
this chap), the twins (because they were funny), plus that fat kid and the
dark-haired leader-girl (mainly because of what they represented). Please note,
this is not to say that the other 'little darling' weren't as charismatic. Just that I associated with these noted kids the most.
Oh! And I do have to mention Ashton Kutcher, Tom Welling,
and Hillary Duff too! Because all three of these 'pretty people' really did
surprise me in their comedic and acting savvy, making their fleeting parts more
memorable than what they were allowed to be.
Overall, this 'Steve Martin film' is like many of the recent
'Steve Martin films'. Conceptually the pretext was a nice one. Thematically the
through-line was a philandering one. And by in large this movie was a good-bad
film, with some nice pieces of additional dramatic tension thrown in for good
measure. Don't you agree Tom?
Well, sod you then, and go to your room without supper.
THE RATING: B-
CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN
Reviewed by David Andrews
on
August 02, 2012
Rating: