MOVIE TITLE: Ted
DIRECTOR: Seth MacFarlane
YEAR: 2012
GENRE: Comedy
RATING: R for language, violence, and sexual content
GRADE: Pass
If you’ve watched any Seth MacFarlane cartoons over the
years, you know exactly what you’re going to get from anything else he does:
crude jokes, ridiculous fight scenes, pop culture references galore, and a
belly full of laughs by the time you’re done watching. You’ll get everything
you’ve come to know and love when you watch Ted, except this time without a
TV-14 restriction holding Seth MacFarlane back. Oh sure, it starts out as an
innocent friendship between a boy and his stuffed bear. But the bear has to
eventually grow up too, which pretty much gives him a license to engage in
whatever degenerate behavior he wants whether it’s snorting cocaine, beating
people up, or having sex in the produce section of a grocery store. The whole
movie is full of over-the-top moments made even funnier when they come from a
Peter Griffin-sounding teddy bear. Growing up is overrated. Thunder buddies for
life!
And because this is a Seth MacFarlane production, that means
a lot of the jokes are going to be politically incorrect. And you know what?
Even watching this in the present day, I don’t care! The more offensive, the
better, I say. At least these disgusting jokes have substance to them. And hey,
as long as it gets a laugh from the audience, all bets are off. Seth MacFarlane
knows what he’s doing when it comes to comedy. None of the jokes come off as
lazy or ham-fisted. It’s not like he scrolls through 4Chan every day just to
dig up new material. He doesn’t need to do that. He’s got enough talent on his
own whether he’s joking about taboo subjects or not. I won’t spoil any of the
jokes here in this review, because I want you to watch the movie for yourself
and enjoy the experience with a fresh and open mind. If you can watch Family
Guy until the end of time, I think you can handle Ted just fine.
But do you know what’s even more unsettling than raunchy
humor? Donny and his son Robert, two of Ted’s “biggest fans”. And by biggest
fans, I mean obsessive serial killers and torturers who stalk Ted everywhere he
goes. If you took Donny and Robert and put them in any other genre of movie,
they could be convincing villains all the same. They’re deranged, abusive,
creepy, controlling, manipulative, and pretty much any other adjective that
will make you want to turn and run. Yes, Robert is a little on the chubby side
and can’t run very fast, but trust me, you can’t get far enough away from that
psychopath or his father. I jumped for joy when Mark Wahlberg’s character
punched Robert in the face and knocked him out cold. But can he do the same to
Donny? I’ll just leave that question hanging for as long as your anxiety will
allow it.
Yes, this movie is a comedy that’s not meant to be taken
seriously, but there is a good story in here about love and friendship. There
are lessons to be learned underneath all of the belly laughs. Is it really
necessary to “grow up”? Is one friend really more important than the other?
Should friendship come easier for lonely kids? Not to sound too philosophical
over a Seth MacFarlane movie, but getting hit in the feels is a common
occurrence throughout the movie, especially near the end. Okay, maybe your
feels won’t get hit nearly as hard as Mark Wahlberg and Ted hit each other in a
cheap hotel room, but still, it’s something to consider when deciding on a
final grade for this movie. In my case, I’ll give it four out of five stars. It’s
not a perfect movie, because the laughs don’t come THAT frequently, but just
frequently enough for some good old fashioned enjoyment.
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