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Wild Hogs
Starring:
Tim Allen, John Travolta, Martin Lawrence, William H. Macy, Marisa Tomei, Jill Hennessy, ...
Genre: Comedy
In Theaters: Mar 2nd 2007

Click Here For Our Interview with John Travolta
Click Here For Our Interview with Tim Allen
Click Here For Our Interview with Marisa Tomei
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Click Here For Our Interview with Martin Lawrence
Click Here For Our Interview with Ray Liotta

Wild Hogs

Review By: Damaris Olivo
DamarisOlivo@TheCinemaSource.com

About a year ago, when CNN Money ran an article on their website stating that the Hell’s Angels Motorcycle Corporation was suing Walt Disney, I can’t say I wasn’t intrigued. How badly could the film be portraying the infamous motorcycle crew?

After watching Wild Hogs, and seeing the “Del Fuegos,” the new name of the rival biker gang lead by Ray Liotta (Goodfellas), it all just seems silly.

One can always count on Disney to deliver a lighthearted, family comedy, with comical villains, and zany antics; and although some may argue the fact that the formula is overplayed and that these kinds of films ride on their A-list stars, sometimes a girl just wants to laugh at William H. Macy jumping naked into a pond. With so many heavy, serious dramatic films out at the moment, Wild Hogs definitely scratches that “senseless comedy” itch.

Doug Madsen (Tim Allen), Woody Stevens (John Travolta), Bobby Davis (Martin Lawrence), and Dudley Frank (William H. Macy) are four middle-aged friends who are jaded with their suburban lifestyles and feel that their lives have become stagnant and boring. Each with their own set of troubles, they hop on their brand-spanking-new Harleys once a week and ride to a neighborhood restaurant where they like to talk, kill time and get away, if even for a moment, from their everyday lives.

Doug feels tired of being thought of as a boring dentist by his pre-teen son; Dudley has given up the hope of ever being able to even hold a conversation with a member of the opposite sex; and Bobby is sick of being nagged and bossed around by his very aggressive wife (who he’s slightly afraid of). Woody, John Travolta’s character, has bigger problems than all of them combined: His swimsuit model wife has left him, he’s discovered that he’s bankrupt, and he’s so emotionally unavailable that he cannot bring himself to tell all this to his three best friends, who so dearly look up to him. Instead, he does the next best thing and coaxes them into going on a motorcycle trip across the country so that they may regain their edge.

Although the formula up to this point is good, the film very soon becomes a slapstick ‘things are on fire, and we’re naked in a pond’ kind of film, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing.

Eventually the group come across a real biker bar, where they meet Jack (Ray Liotta), the quick-tempered leader of the Del Fuego gang and his cronies. Macy and Travolta’s characters manage to get the group at real odds with this gang, and ...


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