Doomsdays (2013) Poster

(2013)

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7/10
Quirky and kinda funny
jimandjanedyck2 December 2015
The two main characters remind me of the type of characters created for the TV series Trailer Park Boys. They don't care much for anybody but themselves and I would not like them to get anywhere near MY house. That being said, in a three stooges kind of way, they blunder through life leaving a trail of damage behind them but still come across as somewhat likable. It is the characters that make this movie, not the plot. I think the actors did a great job of bringing these characters to life. Memorable dudes. Won't say much about the ending but it did come as a bit of a surprise to me. The two characters added later on in the movie were reasonably well played, especially the kid.
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9/10
Early 21st Century Screwball Comedy
artanis_mark20 August 2020
This is one of the funniest movies I've seen in years, a true screwball comedy for the early 21st century about two slackers who break into vacation homes in the Catskills and ransack them. Doomsdays plays like a Hope & Crosby Road picture only with sociopathic criminals as the rascally ne'er-do-wells who charm their way into your heart. To carry the Road analogy further, the straight Crosby role is played by Dirty Fred (Justin Rice), a wisecracking, booze guzzling pickup artist with the manner and appearance of an extremely scruffy grad student, and the Hope role by Bruho (Leo Fitzpatrick) who looks and acts like an escapee from an asylum for the criminally insane, a deeply antisocial personality with a penchant for slashing tires and trashing cars (all for a very altruistic reason) and a hidden kink that plays an important part in the plot.

The dynamic between these two alone provokes steady entertainment as they drift from one empty resort home to another. They break in, get caught yet talk their way out of it, and trash every place they visit, making sure to drink all the decent alcohol and carry off any good drugs they find. The action kicks up further when an acolyte joins, Jaidon, a kid they find passed out after a riotous party who follows them, intrigued by their footloose, glamorous lifestyle. Brian Charles Johnson gets big yuks from the role, consummately playing a chubby putz with a burning desire for a life of action and danger.

The group is completed by Reyna (Laura Campbell), a bright, lively young woman who Dirty Fred chats up at a party (that he crashed, natch). Reyna throws over her conventional lifestyle and joins the wild and groovy housebreaking scene. She quickly proves more adept than the men, effortlessly talking their way out of being caught. This character adds sexual tension to the plot with shifting relationships between Reyna, Dirty Fred, and the initially hostile Bruho. The film did drag a bit during the last half hour as the relationships played themselves out, yet this did lead to a satisfying conclusion I won't give away. The lull in the last third is easily forgiven, given the frantic pace of the first two thirds as the gags fly hot and heavy.

There is a lot of really funny dialogue, most voiced by Dirty Fred, with his perpetually sardonic, unflappable, been there, done that manner. There are so many jokes, the film warrants a second viewing to catch stuff you missed the first time. I found this film amusing for personal reasons since I've vacationed in upstate New York a lot (a really beautiful part of the country), but Doomsdays should appeal to just about anyone, so long as they like their humor black.
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