Warner Independent Pictures (WIP) | Release Date: November 17, 2006
6.0
USER SCORE
Mixed or average reviews based on 56 Ratings
USER RATING DISTRIBUTION
Positive:
27
Mixed:
22
Negative:
7
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9
MichaelL.Dec 2, 2006
Hysterical. Catherine O' Hara is brilliant, and Jennifer Coolidge...oh my God! Not sure this will play in Peoria, but people with a connection to "the business" will be howling in the aisles. Fred Willard's "Access Hollywood" Hysterical. Catherine O' Hara is brilliant, and Jennifer Coolidge...oh my God! Not sure this will play in Peoria, but people with a connection to "the business" will be howling in the aisles. Fred Willard's "Access Hollywood" parody alone is worth the price of admission! Scarily true, scathing yet humane, "For Your Consideration" is not to be missed. Expand
0 of 1 users found this helpful
9
SilasP.Dec 2, 2006
I couldn't agree less with the negative user comments. As one who spent 25 years in show biz and finally escaped, I can attest to the fact that the characters and situations ring painfully, hilariously true. I can't imagine the I couldn't agree less with the negative user comments. As one who spent 25 years in show biz and finally escaped, I can attest to the fact that the characters and situations ring painfully, hilariously true. I can't imagine the Hollywood machine doing much to promote this film, as it skewers everything that is disingenuous, venal, and narcissistic about Hollywood with such pinpoint precision. Catherine O'Hara, Fred Willard, Jane Lynch, Parker Posey, Christopher Guest, and, of course, Jennifer Coolidge are sheer perfection. Hysterical. Expand
0 of 1 users found this helpful
9
YeahI.May 30, 2007
While the first hour seemed a little light on laughs the final half hour more than compensated for it. Catherine O'hara had me laughing so hard I'd highly recommend it for this reason alone. They should have gave her an Oscar While the first hour seemed a little light on laughs the final half hour more than compensated for it. Catherine O'hara had me laughing so hard I'd highly recommend it for this reason alone. They should have gave her an Oscar nomination. Yeah, she's that good. Expand
0 of 1 users found this helpful
7
BarryR.Dec 2, 2006
0 of 0 users found this helpful
7
CorkyS.Dec 1, 2006
First off, I am a HUGE Guest & co. fan. This movie is so close to being great, but there is one thing that brings it down a few dissappointing notches. The movie "Home For Purim" is horrible, and although many popular movies are rife with First off, I am a HUGE Guest & co. fan. This movie is so close to being great, but there is one thing that brings it down a few dissappointing notches. The movie "Home For Purim" is horrible, and although many popular movies are rife with cheese, this is beyond soap-opera bad. If Home for Purim was closer to an actual bad movie, it would have played out much better. Otherwise, I thought all the actors had wonderful characters, and I agree that Catherine O'Hara deserves some "consideration" for her gutsy and flawless performance. It's not a wasted effort, just a misguided one. Better luck next time. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful
7
MarkBayerJan 11, 2007
The latest in director Christopher Guest's trademark series of satiric miniatures of groups on the fringe of show business (community theater, dog competitions, folksinging groups), written by Guest and Eugene Levy and featuring a more The latest in director Christopher Guest's trademark series of satiric miniatures of groups on the fringe of show business (community theater, dog competitions, folksinging groups), written by Guest and Eugene Levy and featuring a more or less ongoing repertory cast including but not limited to Guest, Levy, Catherine O'Hara, Fred Willard, Harry Shearer, Michael McKean and Parker Posey moves to the center of the showbiz spectrum and in doing so eschews some of the gentleness that Guest's films are normally known for--it really draws blood! The cast of a nice little independent movie, Home for Purim, catches wind of possible "Oscar buzz" for some of their performances (before the film is even in the can); the Academy bug bites them, they hit the campaign trail, and the results aren't pretty. They're occasionally not funny either, and to a degree I think that's intentional; Guest and Levy seamlessly incorporated pathos to their palette last time around in A Mighty Wind, in telling the story of divorced folkie duo Mitch and Mickey and the former's bouts with schizophrenia...and in For Your Consideration they add real anger. Their jabs at Entertainment Tonight, local and national talk shows and Ebert and Roeper wannabes is typically spot-on, and I especially relished their take on the "Weinsteinization" of indie filmmaking as the movie-within-a-movie's producers strongly encourage its makers to divest their work of certain elements that make it independent to begin with in order to increase its chances with Oscar voters and the public. (Fat chances they are, too; all this jockeying comes off as especially futile when you realize that the fictional Home for Purim or whatever it's calling itself this week for what it is--a well-intentioned chore to sit through that won't even reach the Top 40 in sales or rentals the first week it's released to DVD.) It's also notable that Willard's entertainment-news interviewer is a spiritual distant cousin of his gauche sportscaster in over his head in Best in Show, but while his character in that film was almost lovable, his antics here are so genuinely callous and loathsome that at certain points they even outrage his only slightly more ethical partner (Jane Lynch) almost as much as they do the audience! In one of those ironic cases of life imitating art a little more closely than anyone really wants, O'Hara memorably plays the unfortunately and inaccurately named Marilyn Hack, a shy actress who's especially affected and compromised by the Oscar campaigning game...and is receiving a lot of real-life Oscar talk for portraying her! (For hers, God's, and everyone else's sake, let's hope O'Hara is personally navigating this a lot better than her character does!) As certain reviewers and posters have already noted, For Your Consideration is slightly lighter on consistent belly laughs than most of Guest's other work (although this still places it considerably ahead of 85% of any other comedies currently playing or that randomly come to mind), and at times its observations on the publicity process and the cost it demands on those involved cut so deep that it's too painful to actually enjoy. But watching Guest's and Levy's normally benign, rather sweet-natured mini-genre actually snarl in rage for the first time is an event well worth watching...and so is a film about Hollywood that, at least in terms of its deeply cynical but sharply observed and highly accurate attitude toward it, can be comfortably mentioned in the same breath as Sunset Boulevard and The Player. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful
8
EricC.Mar 1, 2007
I found myself waiting for that one great laugh that would have me struggling to keep quiet in the theater, but I never got that laugh. All I got was a few decent chuckles. But still, movie addicts like myself have been waiting for this kind I found myself waiting for that one great laugh that would have me struggling to keep quiet in the theater, but I never got that laugh. All I got was a few decent chuckles. But still, movie addicts like myself have been waiting for this kind of movie. The satire of a cinema industry obsessed with the awards season was awesome, almost perfect in its subtlety and edge. I hate what the Oscars and Globes have become, and this movie almost satisfies my lust for revenge. Unfortuanatly, the movie gets too caught up in trying to be ridiculous and distracts you from its point. Still, I got what it was saying, and whoever else did will undoubtably have a satisfied grin on their face as they watch. Oh, and the clips from other "movies" on the entertainment show were classic, especially the cop one. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful
8
ZinoD.Mar 27, 2007
This satire of Hollywood and the movie industry is very funny. The vanity and ruthlessness mix nicely as the characters devolve along with their fillm, "Home for Purim," which gets bought and released as "Home for Thanksgiving." Which also This satire of Hollywood and the movie industry is very funny. The vanity and ruthlessness mix nicely as the characters devolve along with their fillm, "Home for Purim," which gets bought and released as "Home for Thanksgiving." Which also makes it a pretty potent satire of American cultural commercialism. Lots of laugh-out-loud moments. If you like this group's other movies, like Best In Show and Spinal Tap, you'll want to watch this one, too. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful
7
LindaL.Jun 14, 2007
Not a mighty wind, just a gentle breeze. I remember going to see "Best in Show" with my teenage son, and both of us laughing our heads off. Only smiles, here -- still, lots of amusement and enjoyment for fans of the wry work of Guest & Co.
0 of 0 users found this helpful
8
MarcK.Nov 23, 2006
I think you may have to be Jewish to "get" much of the humor, especially in the first half of the movie. I thought this was comparable in quality to "Best in Show," and much better than the critically acclaimed, "A Mighty Wind," which I I think you may have to be Jewish to "get" much of the humor, especially in the first half of the movie. I thought this was comparable in quality to "Best in Show," and much better than the critically acclaimed, "A Mighty Wind," which I found to be sorely lacking. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful
7
ChadS.Nov 25, 2006
The music is never contemporary in many of Woody Allen films. "For Your Consideration" doesn't feel very contemporary either, on the studio lot, that is. It has the same time warp feel that many of late period-Allen films have. As for The music is never contemporary in many of Woody Allen films. "For Your Consideration" doesn't feel very contemporary either, on the studio lot, that is. It has the same time warp feel that many of late period-Allen films have. As for the fictional picture they're making, "Home for Purim" (when the film goes gentile, you can't help but think of Allen's change of pace film "Match Point"), its subversive element is similar to the otherwise throwback-to-another-era sort of film that slyly recalls a particular Todd Haynes-directed pic which was also small and generated a lot of Oscar buzz. "For Your Consideration" also makes reference to the prickly relationship between two 1983 Oscar-nominated actresses who were also generationally challenged like Marilyn Hack (Catherine O'Hara) and Callie Webb (Parker Posey), but goes about it in a roundabout fashion (the feud is between Webb and her co-star/boyfriend). "For Your Consideration" isn't a faux-documentary, but its parodies of celebrity culture-porn news shows like "Entertainment Tonight" and performance art (Webb's one-woman extravaganza) play like the genuine article. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful
8
TimBNov 30, 2006
Not as good as "Best In Show", funnier than "A Mighty Wind". Fred Willard and his haircut are as funy and inappropriate as ever. If you are a fan of Guest's other movies, you'll enjoy it. If you are a fan of the Wayans brothers and Not as good as "Best In Show", funnier than "A Mighty Wind". Fred Willard and his haircut are as funy and inappropriate as ever. If you are a fan of Guest's other movies, you'll enjoy it. If you are a fan of the Wayans brothers and other dumbed-down, pandering, "mainstream" comedies, you will probably miss most of the comedy here. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful
7
AntonH.Dec 10, 2006
Definitely not as funny as anything Guest had done before, I really laughed out loud at almost every scene that involved Ricky Gervais. Unfortunately he doesn't enter the movie until the hour mark. Each individual character could make Definitely not as funny as anything Guest had done before, I really laughed out loud at almost every scene that involved Ricky Gervais. Unfortunately he doesn't enter the movie until the hour mark. Each individual character could make you chuckle, but there were so many characters, and so many plots, that you were really having to sketch the movie together. Catherine O'Hara really got to have a meaty part, and she ripped into it. Her last scene with Fred Williard is hysterical. Parker Posey was wasted in this movie. I think that she is one of the funniest actors working right now, and here she doesn't really get to do anything until the end, which is funny in a bizarre way. I got the feeling that some of the actors resorted to doing things that they had done in other movies to generate laughs. Compared to a lot of the garbage out there that is supposed to be funny, this is funny. But when you are Guest and Levy, and the work that you've done is as good as theirs has been, this is a step below par. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful
7
BillyS.Nov 24, 2006
When I heard Christopher Guest was making a movie about the "Oscar Buzz" surronding a small indie film using his usual enemble of actors, my anticipation went into overdrive and it pains me that I'm not rating this movie a 10. It just When I heard Christopher Guest was making a movie about the "Oscar Buzz" surronding a small indie film using his usual enemble of actors, my anticipation went into overdrive and it pains me that I'm not rating this movie a 10. It just misses the mark on all counts. It seems like the basic story is stretched out to make room for all the regulars and it loses focus on the central characters. There are some laughs, and Jennifer Coolidge gets most of them, but I'm afraid the only Oscar Buzz for this movie is left in the movie. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful