Eight Crazy Nights
Reviewed by Rich Drees
For years, Christmas themed holiday movies have far out-numbered Chanukah themed
ones. Although Adam Sandler’s new animated comedy Eight Crazy Nights is
set during the Jewish Festival of Lights, it’s certainly not going to help
balance the diversity scales.
Adam Sandler voices Davey
Stone, the most miserable man in Dukesberry whose surliness only increases
at Chanukah. After a drunken misadventure that ends with the
destruction of the town’s two holiday themed ice sculptures, Davey is sentenced
to community service at the local community center as the basketball
referee-in-training to Whitey, the good-natured, four foot tall septuagenarian
who is being forced to retire at the end of the season.
What follows is a fairly
predictable 86 minutes, even by holiday film standards. Davey manages to
alienate everyone around him, then discovers what is the root of his misery and
become a completely changed person in time to win back the heart of his long
lost first love.
The animation is
remarkably good, bringing life to even some of the more unrealistic characters
like Whitey and his fraternal twin sister Eleanore. Director Seth Kearsley does
stage a few marginally entertaining sequences, the best being the musical number “Technical
Foul.”
That’s right, like almost every other animated film of recent memory, Eight
Crazy Nights has its fair share of musical numbers. They don’t add much to
the story and merely pad out the film’s already short running time.
It’s hard to believe that
this film was written with a holiday season audience in mind. Davey is yet
another variation of the typical Adam Sandler character. While the screenwriters
(Sandler with Brooks Arthur and Allen Covert) have actually added a little
characterization to explain why Davey is such a miserable cuss, it seems fairly
perfunctory, serving merely as a setup for the clichéd ending. The humor
involved is Sandler’s typical crude variety and one has to wonder who thought it
was a good idea to release such a mean-spirited film at the holidays.
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