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WARNER BROS.
Kyle Red Silverstein, left, Braxton Beckham, Drew Barrymore, Alyvia Alyn Lind, Emma Fuhrmann, Adam Sandler, Jessica Lowe and Kevin Nealon star as disparate companions aiming to make a family connection in “Blended.”

These days, Adam Sandler is a bottle of beer that’s lost all its bubbles — cheap, mass produced domestic beer. So let’s focus on what works in his latest, "Blended," because he sure doesn’t.

Drew Barrymore, in her third pairing with Sandler, still brings energy and conviction to her performance as Lauren, a mother of two thrown together on an African vacation with this lump she met on the Blind Date from Hell — a blind date at Hooters.

Wendi McClendon-Covey, playing her best friend Jen, delivers a comically furious turn and either upstages Barrymore or forces Drew to play at her level. Watch and listen to the two of them berate an obnoxious, snarky loser-dad at Lauren’s son’s Little League game — shouting, talking over each other, name-calling. It’s Vince-and-Owen-in-"Wedding Crashers" good.

And then there’s Terry Crews, who steals the movie as the MC and singer of an African vocal group at the Sun City resort where Jim (Sandler), the sad sporting goods salesman, and Lauren, the professional closet organizer, and their five kids end up in an absurdly contrived joint vacation/safari.

The wild-eyed Crews, dancing and crooning, bumping and grinding, sings of the "blending" that will go on during this week among nontraditional families. He is the Greek chorus for this obvious, stale and stiff comedy, a shirtless jolt of life (the man’s pecs do a dance all their own).

‘BLENDED’
Rated: PG-13
*  1/2
Opens Friday

We are deep into the "family comedy" stage of Sandler’s working life, families where the kids cuss and rhinos hump, where Jim urinating long and loudly outside of a tent is played for a laugh, where the past-expiration-date Kevin Nealon and a jiggly/funny Jessica Lowe (the new Anna Faris?) are the oversexed other "nontraditional family" that the Lauren-Jim ensemble pair up with.

Jim, a widower, is raising three emotionally stunted daughters to be pseudo-jocks, like himself. Who nicknames his daughter Hilary (Bella Thorne) "Larry"? Who would name his troubled middle daughter (Emma Fuhrmann), the one who "still talks to (dead) Mom," Espn?

Maybe the sort of guy who peoples his movies with jocks (Shaq) and jockcasters (Dan Patrick) in cameos, along with other washed-up comics of his generation.

Lauren is newly divorced, with a maddeningly rude and hormonal teen (Braxton Beckham) and tantrum-tossing tween (Kyle Red Silverstein), both of whom need a father figure, since their dad (Joel McHale) is a no-show.

Every set-up is an eye-roller. Jim and Lauren stumble into each other at the drug store. He’s buying tampons for his teen, she’s replacing a porn mag she ripped up for her teen.

Gags and one-liners that would be discarded in a better comedy are trotted out and then underlined. When Lauren gives the tomboy "Larry" a girlish makeover, she hears "I’m Every Woman" in her head, her possible new beau hears "I’ll Make Love to You" while her dad panics and hears "It’s the End of the World As We Know It." Hilarious. Let’s repeat that musical joke, shall we? They do.

The African scenes include digital ostrich riding and a digital monkey band performing "Careless Whisper."

In the middle of it all is Sandler, going through the motions, "a chubby loser" in need of a fist-bump. Even Barrymore, who has gotten rich on "The Wedding Singer" and "50 First Dates," has a hard time giving him one in this flat-beer farce.

 

Review by Roger Moore, McClatchy Newspapers

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