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Film

Review: Hot Tub time Machine

A middle-aged Back to the Future

May 6, 2010 10:33
John Cusack (second right) leads the cast in a time-travel comedy that mixes wit with gross-out humour and a sense of real generational regret

ByJonathan Foreman, Jonathan Foreman

3 min read

The title seems to say it all, as with the dumb but successful "high-concept" comedy, Snakes on A Plane. But Hot Tub Time Machine turns out to be a peculiar and often surprisingly effective hodgepodge of genres and comic styles.

This unabashedly silly and exuberantly vulgar story, about three disgruntled "Generation X" men who travel back in time to 1986 together with a very 2010, computer-obsessed youth, is part homage to '80s teen films, part a modern male-bonding gross-out comedy in the style of The 40 Year Old Virgin, and part intelligent generational satire. It is at times shockingly politically incorrect, with an attitude to disability, homosexuality and straight male fear of the same that some could easily find offensive.

As the film begins, disillusioned fortysomething Adam (John Cusack) has been dumped by his girlfriend. His friend Nick (Craig Robinson, from the US version of The Office), who was once a promising musician, is nearing the end of his tether over his job in a pet store and his domineering wife's infidelity. His other best friend Lou (Rob Corddry) is an angry, pathetically juvenile, alcoholic misanthrope who almost asphyxiates himself in his car while headbanging to the '80s band Mötley Crüe.

Worried that Lou was trying to kill himself, Adam and Nick decide to cheer him up by taking him on a trip to a ski resort where they spent epic weekends back in the 1980s, when as Adam says, they all still had "youth and momentum". They take with them Adam's nephew Jacob (Clark Duke), a virginal geek who spends all his time playing video games in the basement.