Directed by:
Jay RoachCinematography:
Peter JamesComposer:
Randy NewmanCast:
Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller, Teri Polo, Blythe Danner, Nicole DeHuff, Jon Abrahams, Owen Wilson, James Rebhorn, Tom McCarthy, John Fiore, Spencer Breslin (more)VOD (5)
Plots(1)
Male nurse Greg Focker (Ben Stiller) wants to propose to his girlfriend Pam (Teri Polo) while at her parents' house for the weekend. First, however, he must ask her extremely suspicious father, Jack (Robert De Niro), for his permission and Jack has already taken an immediate dislike to Greg. A series of disasters, including failing a lie detector test, occur as Greg tries his best to please Pam's father and the rest of the family. It's not long before even Pam starts having doubts about her hapless suitor. (Paramount Home Entertainment)
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Reviews (5)
The concept is potentially great, especially considering the actors, but after a few jokes about their former jobs, there are boring segues about relatives and acquaintances. When the whole story turns into just "let's blame Focker for everything," I realized how much this attempt at comedy misses the mark. Unfortunately, a few lines about vacuum cleaners won't save it. ()
Quite a pleasant relaxing film about the difficult acquaintance of a young man with the somewhat quirky family of his future wife. In fact, life can't be easy for an idiot like Gaylord Jebal... especially when he's facing a creature that is so demanding, i.e., his father, who is also a CIA agent. A couple of decent (though not dizzyingly intelligent) gags somewhat kill the typical heat of passion and "loving" pathos. And the decent comedian Stiller and the really large-format father Robert DeNiro are victorious over the typical heat of passion and pathos. No threat to the diaphragm, or to good taste... ()
A feat that plunged De Niro into the sinister waters of comedic roles. Sometimes he did better, sometimes worse, but with a few exceptions he never got out of them. It's impossible to like the film much for that alone, but the second thing is equally obvious, Robert's character has huge potential and possibilities that are totally and reprehensibly untapped, and Stiller alone is not enough for great fun. It has a solid level of filmmaking and a few humorous scenes that are taken to total absurdity, but the little details are awkward rather than funny; you look at it, and sometimes you feel even more embarrassed than the protagonists. It’s alright for a Saturday afternoon, but not for prime-time. ()
When your daughter drags a weirdo into your house, you, as her loving daddy, will understandably go mad, but to spread such a conventional plot into a 100-minute-long farce with star actors and a pointless gimmick in the form of a former secret agent is a downright fail. We do laugh, Stiller is occasionally funny and De Niro is properly wacky, and their interactions have the necessary grace, but why so much fame and uproar? Even an average Czech filmmaker could produce something like this in similar quality and for much less money, not everything is so pure and perfect in Hollywood. ()
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