Butter (2012)
Starring Jennifer Garner, Ty Burrell, Olivia Wilde, Alicia Silverstone, Rob Corddry, Yara Shahidi, and Hugh Jackman
Directed by Jim Field Smith
***This film is currently streaming on Netflix***
For some reason or another, Butter got trashed by the critics upon its very limited release earlier this year. While it's a skewering of sorts of Midwestern conservatives, it's only a mild roasting and from this conservative's perspective, there are times when we deserve some slight jabs aimed our way. I think maybe some felt Butter didn't go far enough, but I thought it was a surprisingly amusing comedy with some decent performances and a pleasant enough script that never overstays its welcome at any point.
In Iowa, butter carving is a huge pastime, taking a coveted prime spot at the State Fair. For the past fifteen years, Bob Pickler (Ty Burrell) has been the champ, creating such memorable carvings as the holocaust-themed Schindler's List sculpture in 1995 or this past year's epic The Last Supper. However, the governing board of the butter carving contest has told Bob that the time has come for him to relinquish his crown and allow someone else to have an opportunity to succeed. While Bob agrees, his wife Laura (Jennifer Garner) is disgusted with the notion, afraid that she is going to lose the high profile awareness that comes with her gig as the wife of the best butter carver in Iowa. Laura sets out at becoming an expert carver herself and all would seem to be going according to her plan until ten year-old Destiny (Yara Shahidi) decides to enter the competition. A young African-American girl living with her new foster parents (Alicia Silverstone and Rob Corddry), Destiny discovers that she is fantastically adept at carving the yellow dairy product and sets up quite a showdown between herself and Laura.
There are some nice performances peppered throughout. Jennifer Garner was over-the-top, but the role required that level of insanity to a certain degree, and I think she has proven with this and a few other roles that she's a nice comedienne. Ty Burrell is actually nicely subdued and I found it a welcome change of pace for the sometimes frantic (though very funny) character he plays on Modern Family. Yara Shahidi was great despite the fact that the screenwriter wanted to make her "wiser beyond her years." Oftentimes that can prove excruciatingly annoying, but Shahidi was able to reel it in a bit and at least act like a kid.
Surprisingly, the best role in the whole flick comes from Rob Corddry and no one is more shocked than me to be saying that. Corddry plays Destiny's foster dad Ethan and there's something incredibly natural when he's onscreen with young Shahidi. His character never talks down to this kid who's been shipped from foster home to foster home because he knows she's been through a lot in her short life. He recognizes that she's young, but he treats her with respect and kindness. Considering other things I've seen Corddry in, I was shocked that he had this simple, down-to-earth, "dad" character in him...so big kudos to him.
Butter isn't some fantastic film, but I had a heckuva good time with it. Granted, there are some faults -- Hugh Jackman pops in more than halfway through in a role he likely did as a favor for someone and Olivia Wilde plays an Asian stripper who, while quite funny, felt a tiny bit out of place -- but overall, this is well worth the ninety minutes it'll take you to watch it via Netflix's streaming.
There are some nice performances peppered throughout. Jennifer Garner was over-the-top, but the role required that level of insanity to a certain degree, and I think she has proven with this and a few other roles that she's a nice comedienne. Ty Burrell is actually nicely subdued and I found it a welcome change of pace for the sometimes frantic (though very funny) character he plays on Modern Family. Yara Shahidi was great despite the fact that the screenwriter wanted to make her "wiser beyond her years." Oftentimes that can prove excruciatingly annoying, but Shahidi was able to reel it in a bit and at least act like a kid.
Surprisingly, the best role in the whole flick comes from Rob Corddry and no one is more shocked than me to be saying that. Corddry plays Destiny's foster dad Ethan and there's something incredibly natural when he's onscreen with young Shahidi. His character never talks down to this kid who's been shipped from foster home to foster home because he knows she's been through a lot in her short life. He recognizes that she's young, but he treats her with respect and kindness. Considering other things I've seen Corddry in, I was shocked that he had this simple, down-to-earth, "dad" character in him...so big kudos to him.
Butter isn't some fantastic film, but I had a heckuva good time with it. Granted, there are some faults -- Hugh Jackman pops in more than halfway through in a role he likely did as a favor for someone and Olivia Wilde plays an Asian stripper who, while quite funny, felt a tiny bit out of place -- but overall, this is well worth the ninety minutes it'll take you to watch it via Netflix's streaming.
The RyMickey Rating: B
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