Saturday, April 27, 2013

Review: 'Pain & Gain' a crude, cruel and crass true crime comedy

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Review: 'Pain & Gain' a crude, cruel and crass true crime comedy

He's well known as the germaphobic TV detective Monk, but Tony Shalhoub will soon be seen in the germ-rich environs of the locker room. In director Michael Bay's action-comedy Pain & Gain (out April 26), the 59-year-ancient plays a wealthy gymgoer

(CNN) — What was it Jane Fonda used to say? "No pain, no gain." She wasn't talking about punching a gentleman in the face, handcuffing him to a chair for days and weeks on aim, stringing him upside down like a piece of dry-cleaning, setting him on fire

(CNN) — What was it Jane Fonda used to say? "No pain, no gain." She wasn't talking about punching a gentleman in the face, handcuffing him to a chair for days and weeks on aim, stringing him upside down like a piece of dry-cleaning, setting him on fire

And yet that's exactly what he does with Pain & Gain, a weirder-than-fiction yarn about a South Florida crime spree that points and snickers in the direction of precisely the supersized grotesquerie that's long been Bay's stock-in-trade. He blankets

In this week's video, Times critics offer their thoughts on “Pain & Gain,” “Mud” and “The Reluctant Fundamentalist.” See all of this week's reviews here. Movies, This Week's Movies, Movies, Mud (Movie), Pain & Gain (Movie), The Reluctant Fundamentalist

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