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Okay, I actually loved this movie…I opinion it was comical and spicy and fair what I needed to seek, something pointless and yet does the trick perfectly. You can always rely of Robin Williams for that. No, it’s not the smartest comedy but it’s not like we understanding we were walking into ‘Fargo’ people, we were walking into a family vacation comedy that’s tubby of slapstick laughs and base humor, and that should be what you expected. Robin Williams plays Bob, a man whose a slave to his job, a job he’s timid he may lose. He’s so timid that he actually cancels his family’s vacation to Hawaii and takes them on an RV hump to Colorado with hopes to sneak off to a meeting with his germaphobe boss in order to maintain his job. Along the arrangement (of course keeping his suitable intentions secret) he tries to recreate the bond he once had with his family. This of course starts of shakey since neither his wife (Cheryl Hines) nor his children, teenage daughter Cassie (JoJo) whose going through her rebelous “i abhor mommy and daddy” stage and his young son Carl (Josh Hutcherson) whose tremulous about his limited size, are supportive. But after all the problems with sewage, irregular hillbilly RV neighbors the Gornicke family (led by Jeff Daniels and Kristin Chenoweth) and some pesky racoons their is a family bonding moment that is shattered by a bowel scrape (sort-of) a sinking RV and the exposure of Bob’s secret meeting. In the ruin, RV may be predictable family fun, but the point composed remains that it’s family fun, and that’s gotta amount to something.

I’ve read reviews of RV, and they uniformly panned the movie as piffle; laughable tripe that reinforced family values and light humor, wasting the talents of Robin Williams.

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Give me a shatter.

See, the implication that the family road saunter movie is somehow a produce of high art is false to initiate with. Although my family (and my wife’s family) venerates the National Lampoon vacation movies as the ultimate in comedy, the truth of the matter is it’s all a string of droll gags and ridiculous foils. It takes precise skill to play a perpetually optimistic patriarch in the face of fresh indignities and family squabbles. If anything, the family road rush movie is really unbiased a condensed version of half the sitcoms on television. And there’s a reason those sitcoms are detached around, even though the critics patiently define over and over how unimaginative they are.

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They’re legal. It IS insensible. But then, so is having to deal with the inanities of novel life. RV is merely an update of a long established tradition of pitting a man (Bob Munro played by Robin Williams), his hot wife (Cheryl Hines), his teenage daughter (Joanna Levesque) and pre-teen son (Josh Hutcherson) against the world and seeing who comes out on top. And we root for Bob all the device.

What makes RV so provocative is that it doesn’t deviate at all from the formula but cleverly updates all the trials and tribulations. Bob’s affection for his adorable daughter at two years weak is sharply contrasted by her wisecracking personality as a teenager. How many parents notice at their kids and wonder what happened to the darling who never wanted to leave their side? Bob’s career hinges on finishing a presentation, and great of the movie is taken up with his personal struggle to come by a signal for his Blackberry. Road warriors feel his afflict. And as an older, funnier man, Bob constantly has to gawk his attend as younger, inexperienced climbers try to consume the spotlight.

In short, the Monroe struggles are the current struggles of the middle class. Obvious, Clark Griswold didn’t have these problems, but then the National Lampoon movies were made decades ago. RV brings it all up to date with one difference: unlike Cousin Eddie and his brood, the country folk are actually the wiser and more decent family. We could learn a lot from their home values, preaches Brother Sonnenfeld. Maybe he’s true.

When RV was playing at my parents’ house, we were waiting for my brother to join us to peek a DVD. Instead, we watched (and laughed at) RV all the scheme through.

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