The Boss
Melissa McCarthy is pretty grating. She's like Chris Farley in that she's really a one-note character. Obnoxious fat ass with some surprising agility, at least two fat pratfalls per flick and supposedly a heart of gold.
I keep seeing reviews of this movie (and others of hers) that say she's this clearly great comedic actress trapped in movies that don't properly use her talents. They compare her to Bill Murray and Jim Carey. But what if the opposite is true? What if this shrill, crass, vulgar, obese moose in a china shop schtick is all she has in the tank. I tend to think it is. Even in Spy, which was one of her successes, she was being the same character. That movie was elevated not by her one trick pony but by rich performances from Jason Statham, Jude Law, Rose Byrne, Miranda Hart, and the guy who played Aldo. If she had carried the film like she tried to do this one? Turd.
She's not abysmal here (not nearly as bad as Tammy), and neither is the brain-dead vacant-eyed Kristin Bell, but that doesn't mean they're great either.
The story has a funny moment or two, but dips unnecessarily into gutter-level crudity when it really doesn't need to. I saw parents bringing young (third or fourth grade) children in despite the R rating and those kids were treated to a lengthy, unneeded scene where three people banter about who's sucking who's dick.
In a movie like this you need to have somebody to pull for or relate to and there just wasn't a soul. McCarthy was an asshole, so you didn't want her to triumph. Bell was a brain-dead, botox face schlump so you had no rooting interest for her. The girl playing Bell's kid was a pie-faced over-emoting reject from a disney casting call, so no empathy there. Bell's "love interest" was such a poorly constructed character you had no interest in him at all.
The film kept clumsily reaching for emotion that just wasn't there. Neither were many laughs. That the "brain trust" from this movie has the Ghostbusters franchise in their inept paws makes me cringe.
Another major problem with the movie? Several characters, including Kathy Bates as schlubby shrew's mentor, were introduced and discarded without ever really having impact or closure. Bad, bad storytelling.
This is a half-baked, lukewarm semi-comedy with few laughs, the occasional moderately amusing setup, a stockpile of wasted characters and a penchant for making the wrong people the heroes.