Basically another Kevin Smith movie directed by Jay. A little bit darker without as many laughs. Just as raunchy as one would expect.
Madness in the Method
2019
Comedy / Crime
Madness in the Method
2019
Comedy / Crime
Plot summary
Jason Mewes, attempting method acting in order to gain more respect for himself in Hollywood, slowly descends into madness.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
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Basically another Kevin Smith movie
Why?
Jay and Silent Bob star Jason Mewes makes his directorial debut with Madness in the Method, in which he stars as himself, forever typecast as the stoner but who desperately wants to gain respect by taking on more serious roles. Encouraged by his pal, director Kevin Smith, to seek out a one-of-a-kind book that will divulge the secrets of method acting, Jason finds himself descending slowly into a world of madness and murder.
Having just sat through this thoroughly abysmal movie, I know how Mewes feels: by the end of Madness in the Method, I felt my grip on sanity had gone and I wanted to kill somebody.
One thing this film makes abundantly clear is that Mewes isn't Kevin Smith (hell, even Kevin Smith isn't Kevin Smith as much these days): this woeful attempt at emulating his long-time chum's slacker comedy style is a diabolical wreck that sees Mewes not only embarrassing himself, but a whole load of his C-list industry pals as well. Vinnie Jones gets a pass, being a footballer who has somehow carved a new career in Hollywood, but Dean Cain, Judd Nelson, Casper Van Dien, Danny Trejo, Zach Galligan, Teri Hatcher, Brian O'Halloran, and the lovely Gina Carano (who deserves much better than this) give performances that are painful to watch.
Mind you, working from a cringe-worthy script by Dominic Burns and Chris Anastasi, what chance did they have? Nearly 100 minutes of mind-numbing dross that should have been shredded moments after it was written, Madness in the Method makes even the worst of Kevin Smith's movies look like pure genius.
1/10. Stan Lee's last movie appearance -- not the greatest way to bid farewell.
Pigeon holed
Sometimes you get a certain image and the public does not accept you as something different. Danny Trejo cherishes that, he says he enjoys it. Plus he is Mexican so he doesn't feel like he is being stereotyped (his words not mine). Still even he gets to step out and play a different version of himself.
Generally speaking you have a few people playing themselves (no not like that, behave!),but being differently than they are in real life. Or at least they can live out some version of their frustration when it comes to how the public views them - see Dean Cain aka Superman but many others too. So yes the movie is also very self aware and the jokes may not all strike with everyone, but that is to be expected ...