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Analyze That ( 2002)

Directed by
   Harold Ramis

Writing by
   Kenneth Lonergan
   Peter Tolan


Authentic U.S. Region 1
U.S. Factory Sealed
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Genre:   Comedy    Crime   

Runtime: 96 min

Cast of Characters
Robert De Niro ... Paul Vitti
Billy Crystal ... Ben Sobel
Lisa Kudrow ... Laura Sobel
Joe Viterelli ... Jelly
Cathy Moriarty ... Patti LoPresti (as Cathy Moriarty-Gentile)
Joey Diaz ... Ducks (as Joey 'Coco' Diaz)
Jerome LePage ... Convict (as Jerome Le Page)
Joseph Bono ... Wiseguy
Brian Rogalski ... Earl
Thomas Rosales Jr. ... Coyote
Patrick Marcune ... Prisoner
John F. Gooding ... Prison Guard
Henry Morales-Ballet ... Prison Guard
Scott Dillin ... Prison Guard (as Scotty Dillin)
Ted Neustadt ... Rabbi

Plot Outline: Mobster Paul Vitti is released into Dr. Ben Sobol's care, where only more chaos ensues. The mafia's Paul Vitti (De Niro) is back in prison and will need some serious counseling when he gets out. Naturally, he returns to his analyst Dr. Ben Sobel (Crystal) for help and finds that Sobel needs some serious help himself as he has inherited the family practice, as well as an excess stock of stress.

Runtime: 96 min

Language: English

Color: Color

Aspect Ratio: 1.85 : 1

Sound Mix: DTS Dolby Digital SDDS

Certification: Malaysia:U   Malaysia:18PL   Argentina:13   Australia:M   Brazil:12   Canada:14A   Finland:K-11   France:U   Germany:12   Hong Kong:IIB   Iceland:12   Iceland:L   Netherlands:AL   Netherlands:MG6   Norway:11   Peru:14   Philippines:PG-13   Singapore:NC-16   South Korea:12   Sweden:11   Switzerland:12   Switzerland:12   Switzerland:12   Taiwan:PG-12   UK:15   USA:R  

Quotes: Quotes:[ first lines] Ducks : How did he know about the money? And how did he know that Tony Cisco got popped? We didn't find out about it till this morning. more

Comments:
 "Analyze That" is proof the critics can be wrong. Which probably means you shouldn't be listening to me, either. But you are, oh well. I guess I'll have to review the movie, now. The Boss and The Shrink are back in therapy: Paul Vitti (Robert De Niro) has been locked up in Sing-Sing for 850 days. Ben Sobel (Billy Crystal) has just lost his father. That's when he gets the call from Vitti. Vitti gives him the low-down: Someone is trying to kill Vitti in jail. Sobel hangs up, Vitti gets mad, so he fakes crazy, and Sobel gets called in (since he is Vitti's psychiatrist). Sobel believes Vitti is cuckoo in the slammer, as he sees him singing tunes from "West Side Story" (one of the funniest parts in the film). So Vitti is released into the custody of Ben Sobel. But on the ride to Sobel's house, Vitti snaps out of it, only to reveal that he is not crazy, but, in fact, quite well. Now Vitti must start a new life and get a real job - that involves working "from 9 to 5!" - and find out who is trying to kill him...and why. Perhaps I am mistaken, but "Analyze That" is funnier than "Analyze This." Maybe it's just me, but I found it quite funny. I didn't think it was a "rip-off" sequel, there for "no artistic reason." Sure, it's a sequel. Of course it's not going to be an Oscar-winner for originality; I don't ask for that in a comedy. Honestly, can you think of any sequel (other than the rare "Godfather Part II" film) that is as good as the original in terms of reasons for being there? All I know is that I think "Analyze That" had some very funny moments. Take, for instance, the scenes where Vitti is trying to get a new job. He becomes a car salesman for a day, and leads around a couple, showing them a nice car. "Look at that trunk - you could fit three bodies in there!" he says. When they say they're going to think about it: "What's there to think about? You've been busting my b@lls for the last hour over this thing, asking me all these stupid questions, taking it for a test drive...so why don't you buy it?" Scenes like these are hilarious. And while there are somewhat long sequences without any laughs, the laugh-out-loud scenes more than make up for those lacking. The only thing about this film that makes me drop the rating a notch is the execution of the last half hour. Just like the first movie, they set up a ridiculous "action" ending, that isn't action at all. Its ending is overlong and goes way too long without any laughs. But that is the only thing I didn't like about the movie. De Niro and Crystal have a real chemistry, even more so here than in the first film. De Niro steals the scenes he is in, and Crystal steals the scenes he is in, and when they are both on screen, you're not sure who to look at. I find Robert De Niro's latest journeys into comedy quite funny. He made a few comedies here and there in the past, but in the last three years he's coughed out some funny movies. "Analyze This," "Meet the Parents," "Analyze That," and to a certain degree (it was okay), "Showtime." Perhaps I am confused. Maybe I need to see the first again. But having seen the original about twice, and "Analyze That" once, I can honestly say that I laughed more in "Analyze That" than I did watching "Analyze This." And if that's not a good sequel, I don't know what is. Here's to "Analyze This, That, and the Other Thing"!  

UPC 085392330027