zBoneman.com -- Home Movie Reviews

Anything Else (2003)

Anything Else
Jewish Pie

Starring:

Jason Biggs
Christina Ricci
Woody Allen
Stockard Channing

Released By:

Universal Studios

Released In:

2003

Reviewed By:

Adam Mast

Grade:

B-

Buy this item at Amazon.com
zBoneman on Rotten Tomatoes

Woody Allen churns out films faster than just about any other film maker out there. The man has a lot to say, and when he's good, he's really good. Lucky for him, even his weaker efforts have something substantial to offer. I'd call Anything Else one of his weaker efforts, and that really isn't a knock towards the picture.

Jason Biggs is a young comedy writer with an entire future ahead of him. His writing is really starting to take off and it helps that he's in love with the perfect woman. Or so he thinks. Christina Ricci is the object of his affection, and as the film progresses, Biggs slowly begins to realize that he's in love with one neurotic individual.

The marketing campaign for this film was curiously odd. Allen's name was rarely mentioned in commercials, and the movie appeared to be a typical romantic comedy, so going in, I was prepared for something much different than what I got.

Through the first act of the picture, I wasn't impressed at all. The dialogue felt stilted and the performances appeared wooden. I kept thinking to myself; "Woody Allen didn't direct this." As the movie slowly began to take shape, I did warm up to it a bit. In fact, the movie really comes alive when Allen is on screen. He appears as a sort of mentor to Biggs, and while he delivers his dialogue in a typical Woody Allen fashion, he comes across as more likable than neurotic. I really enjoyed his scenes with Biggs, in which he would try to talk sense into this young, confused man.

Jason Biggs doesn't quite have the confidence to bring this character to life, but it certainly shows a new kind of potential from the star of the American Pie series. With her big eyes and smooth skin, Christina Ricci is near perfect as Biggs' strange, dysfunctional nightmare of a wife. This complex character has many layers, and Ricci really seems at home in this role. In fact, this is probably her strongest work.

What really took me by surprise was the focus of the picture. This isn't really a romance at all. This is a story about growing up and taking chances in life. And the final moment when we realize what the title of the movie has to do with what's going on in Allen's crazy universe, everything seems to make sense. Yes, like many of Allen's pictures, Anything Else is about that crazy thing called life.

Woody Allen may have tried to cram too much stuff into Anything Else, but there are some absolutely wonderful moments in this picture, including one scene in which a magnetic Stockard Channing sings a tune while playing piano. It's a sweet, passionate, irrelevant moment, but one that works and Allen has the good sense to not cut away.

I wouldn't rank Anything Else among Woody Allen's strongest work, but it is a hell of lot more insightful than some of the other slop that's been invading our multiplexes as of late.

:: zBoneman.com Reader Comments ::

Jeanette MacRae

Jeanette MacRae

I just wanted to say that I too am a great fan of Allen's work and I haven't found anyone who's liked this film as much as myself, and I found your review to be the most appreciative of the point Allen was attempting to get across. I notice that you haven't posted a review for Hollywood Ending, if you have yet to see it, I highly recommend you do. With the exception of The Player and a few other notable titles, it is one of the keener satires of the movie business that I've ever seen. Like many of Allen's later films it's vastly underated.

Adam

Adam

Hi Jeanette,

Thanks for reading our site. As a matter a fact, I just saw Hollywood Ending about a month ago. Absolutely terrific. It annoys me that the film disappeared from theaters so quickly. Very underrated. By the way, I love most of Allen's work, but Crimes and Misdermeanors is my personal favorite.

Ditto

Ditto

When I went to this movie I had no idea it was a Woody Allen film, I just thought it was another Jason Biggs juvenile outting, and it wasn't until Woody showed up on screen until I realized any different.

The Tinman

The Tinman

Ever since his last great film, 1997's Deconstructing Harry, Woody Allen has been seriously coasting; it's not that I haven't found something of interest in his subsequent films (I actually thought that both Sweet and Lowdown and The Curse of the Jade Scorpion were good films, and hey, I even kind of liked Celebrity), but the spark just wasn't there. It's like Allen is making his one film a year out of habit; he needs to rest and rejuvenate. Anything Else is no different; it's not a bad film, but it really only comes alive when Allen himself was on-screen. Here he plays Dobel, the paranoid lunatic/philosopher mentor to Jason Bigg's young writer; Allen's comic timing is sharp as ever when it comes to his philosophical bon mots disguised as classic one liners. The rest of the cast tries, Jason Biggs, like Kenneth Branagh in Celebrity, even adapts some Woody-mannerisms (though not to that extreme). Despite the Moby playing in the background of the Manhattan party scene, Allen's grasp of twenty somethings seems tenuous at best; personally, I can't remember the last time someone at a party tried to strike up a conversation about Dostoyevsky with me.

Woodrow

Woodrow

Anything Else proves that Woody Allen is still a master and his yeoman work ethic is continually amazing - An american treasure

Add your own comment here and see it posted immediately!
Name: e-Mail:
Comment:
Spam Prevention Check:
Please enter the following code in the box below.
Security Image