Film Snail

Long Shot
Long Shot

6.7

Long Shot

R·2019·125m

Summary

Journalist Fred Flarsky reunites with his childhood crush, Charlotte Field, now one of the most influential women in the world. As she prepares to make a run for the Presidency, Charlotte hires Fred as her speechwriter — much to the dismay of her trusted advisers.

Cast

Charlize Theron

Charlize Theron

Charlotte Field

Seth Rogen

Seth Rogen

Fred Flarsky

O'Shea Jackson Jr.

O'Shea Jackson Jr.

Lance

June Diane Raphael

June Diane Raphael

Maggie Millikin

Ravi Patel

Ravi Patel

Tom

Andy Serkis

Andy Serkis

Parker Wembley

Bob Odenkirk

Bob Odenkirk

President Chambers

Alexander Skarsgård

Alexander Skarsgård

Prime Minister James Steward

Tristan D. Lalla

Tristan D. Lalla

Agent M

Braxton Herda

Braxton Herda

Young Fred

Aviva Mongillo

Aviva Mongillo

Young Charlotte

Randall Park

Randall Park

Boss

James Saito

James Saito

Minister Kishido

Lisa Kudrow

Lisa Kudrow

Katherine

Kurt Braunohler

Kurt Braunohler

Wembley News Anchor #1

Paul Scheer

Paul Scheer

Wembley News Anchor #2

Claudia O'Doherty

Claudia O'Doherty

Wembley News Anchor #3

Nathan Morris

Nathan Morris

Nathan Morris

Shawn Stockman

Shawn Stockman

Shawn Stockman

Wanya Morris

Wanya Morris

Wanya Morris

Lil Yachty

Lil Yachty

Lil Yachty

Aladeen Tawfeek

Aladeen Tawfeek

Bharath

Isla Dowling

Katarina Prudence Wembley

Anton Koval

Anton Koval

Alt-Right Leader

Marcel Jeannin

Marcel Jeannin

CNS News Anchor

Marc Rowland

Movement Coach

James Hicks

James Hicks

Boyfriend

Aalia Adam

Anchor on Tarmac

Lucy Van Oldenbarneveld

BCNMS News Anchor

Julie Roussel

Julie Roussel

French TV Reporter

Daniel Rindress-Kay

Daniel Rindress-Kay

LT. Gary Smith

Ivan Smith

Ivan Smith

Indian Prime Minister

Sean Tucker

Sean Tucker

Aryan Grande

Brett Watson

Brett Watson

Alt-Right Guy #2

Victor Cornfoot

Victor Cornfoot

Bodega DSS Agent

Mairtin O'Carrigan

Mairtin O'Carrigan

Swedish Man

Anne Day-Jones

Anne Day-Jones

Paris News Anchor

Arthur Holden

Arthur Holden

Royal Crier

Kara Raposo

Kara Raposo

Little Girl on TV

Frank Schorpion

Frank Schorpion

TV General

Natasha Gargiulo

Reporter Outside Library

Sean Curley

Sean Curley

Tad

Johnny Cortes

Johnny Cortes

Bartender

Holden Wong

Holden Wong

Secretary of State Staffer

Li Li

Li Li

Prime Minister's Wife

Alain Gendreau

Alain Gendreau

Diplomat

Yves Fortin

US Senator

Hiba Magrabi

Staffer

Jonathan Vanderzon

Jonathan Vanderzon

Douchebag Speechwriter

Nathaly Thibault

Swedish Delegate

Xiao Sun

Xiao Sun

Mrs. Lin

Veronique Senosier Roberge

News Reporter

Garett Pringle

White House Staff

David Leblanc

David Leblanc

Air Force Staff

Scott Humphrey

Scott Humphrey

Wembly's Assistant

Hamza Haq

Hamza Haq

MSNBC Anchor

Gabrielle Graham

Gabrielle Graham

Franci

George Chiang

Chinese President Wu

Chris Cavener

Chris Cavener

Juggalo

Philippe Bourret

Alt Right Member

Angel Azmeer

Dancer

Luca De Massis

Luca De Massis

Tv Cameraman (uncredited)

John Robinson

Commander

Crew

Director

Jonathan Levine

Screenplay

Liz Hannah

Screenplay, Story

Dan Sterling

Reviews

m

msbreviews

May 3, 2019

7

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Who would have thought that the first (positive) surprise of the year would be a movie starring Seth Rogen in a romantic-comedy?! This genre has been having trouble for the past few years (only a handful of films are worthy of high praise), but Long Shot's amazing cast called my attention at the beginning of 2019 when I was organizing my watchlist of the year. I genuinely love Rogen type of humor, and Charlize Theron is one of the best actresses of the 21st century. Add three more terrific actors like Bob Odenkirk (President Chambers), O'Shea Jackson Jr. (Lance), and an unrecognizable Andy Serkis (Parker Wembley), and you have yourself a clear path to success.

So, what's the missing key ingredient? A well-written and compelling story, which is the number one problem with rom-coms of today. Most of these movies go straight to streaming services since they're the easiest ones to produce. Just gather a reasonably decent cast, put together a cliche narrative about how two people with nothing in common end up together through the most unlikely and dumb plot devices, and you have a low-budget “success”. Long Shot‘s premise follows a variation of that concept and it still carries the trademark conventionality, but it's the chemistry of its leads, the hilarious comedy and the beautifully-written screenplay that makes this one stand out.

The dialogues don't feel forced, a large portion of the jokes land, and the best compliment I can give to this film: it took itself seriously, and it worked seamlessly. There’s a heartfelt message to transmit to the viewers, and it’s delivered in the most realistic possible way. The romance doesn’t seem far-fetched or born out of nowhere. Instead, it has a wonderful arc, filled with real-life relationship moral dilemmas and difficult decisions. Everything that any character says either makes sense or makes you laugh.

The cast is brilliant as expected. Seth Rogen and Charlize Theron‘s chemistry is palpable, and it’s one of the reasons why the romance part of the movie works. They clearly had much fun on-set, and that’s visible on the big screen. Rogen provides most of the laughs, but he also proves that he can be dramatic if necessary. Theron is just impeccable. She simply can’t act a single line of her script in a way that’s not perfect, whether it’s a romantic scene or a comedy bit. Her range is on display throughout the entire runtime, and Jonathan Levine should be extremely grateful as a director to have such an outstanding actress to work with.

In addition to all of this, there’s one thing I never expected to be praising right now: the makeup department. Before the film, I knew that Andy Serkis was on the cast, but I completely forgot what his role was. Without an ounce of exaggeration, I truly believe that it’s almost impossible to recognize him as Wembley if you don’t know beforehand that he participates in the movie. When I re-checked the cast members, I remembered that he had a role indeed, and I was almost as surprised by the discovery as I was with how much I enjoyed this film. O’Shea Jackson Jr. also delivers a hilarious performance while Bob Odenkirk doesn’t really have much screentime to shine.

This is one of those movies that you can’t precisely point out obvious flaws. A flawless film doesn’t mean it’s a perfect 10/10 movie. It just means you really don’t have any major issues with it. If every single aspect of a film is just “good”, then the movie is “good”, not “incredible” or “amazing”. That is how I view Long Shot. It’s an extremely entertaining rom-com, undeniably one of the best I’ve seen these past few years. Even though the main concept follows the genre’s traditional storylines, its well-written screenplay, hilarious comedy bits, and outstanding protagonists make a surprisingly serious story remarkably entertaining.

It’s a fast-paced 2-hour runtime that I recommend to anyone who just wants to have a good time at the movie theater.

Rating: B+

Media

Status:

Released

Original Language:

English

Budget:

$40,000,000.00

Revenue:

$0.00

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