It ends up feeling as stale as week-old bagels and lox.
Keeping Up With The Steins (2006)
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Reviews Counted:81
Fresh:30
Rotten:51
Average Rating:4.9/10
Consensus: Keeping Up With the Steins is one of those comedies that play more like a corny sitcom than a theatrical movie.
Theatrical Release:May 12, 2006 Limited
Box Office: $4,288,416
Synopsis: While intending to bridge the gap between boyhood and manhood, bar mitzvahs can often more closely resemble extravagant sweet-sixteen parties than actual religious ceremonies. It is this trend that... While intending to bridge the gap between boyhood and manhood, bar mitzvahs can often more closely resemble extravagant sweet-sixteen parties than actual religious ceremonies. It is this trend that forms the basis of KEEPING UP WITH THE STEINS, a family comedy about what happens when a Hollywood agent uses his son's bar mitzvah as a vehicle for outspending his nemesis. Jeremy Piven perfectly inhabits the role of Adam Fiedler, a character strikingly similar to that of his star turn as Ari Gold on the HBO series ENTOURAGE. Energetic and fast-talking, Adam approaches his son Benjamin's bar mitzvah in the same way he deals with business, stopping at nothing to make his son's party more excessive than anything thrown by the competition. But will this conspicuous spending achieve anything, aside from alienating Adam's son (SPY KIDS' Daryl Sabara) and wife (Jami Gertz), and making Adam look like a fool? Through Benjamin's voiceovers, we learn that he is not only against such an elaborate affair, but is terrified of having to master Hebrew in time for the ceremony. While Adam craves the limelight associated with such an event, Benjamin would rather not be the center of attention. Wise beyond his years, Benjamin decides to use the event as a means to reunite his father with his estranged grandfather, Irwin (Garry Marshall). KEEPING UP WITH THE STEINS explores ideas of growth, with the film's 13-year-old protagonist Benjamin displaying more maturity than most of the adults in the film. Directed by Scott Marshall, the film, while sometimes predictable, benefits from a star-studded cast (including Doris Roberts, Cheryl Hines, and Daryl Hannah) and a well-written script. A coming-of-age story filled with Jewish humor, the film should appeal to viewers of all ages. [More]
Starring: Jeremy Piven, Jami Gertz, Daryl Hannah, Cheryl Hines
Starring: Jeremy Piven, Jami Gertz, Daryl Hannah, Cheryl Hines, Garry Marshall, Larry Miller, Doris Roberts, Daryl Sabarra, Richard Benjamin
Director: Scott Marshall
Director: Scott Marshall
Screenwriter: Mark Zakarin
Producer: David Scharf, A.D. Oppenheim
Composer: John Debney
Studio: Miramax Films
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Release:
Oct 31, 2006
Reviews for Keeping Up With The Steins
Turns out to be less than we'd hoped, and certainly different -- quieter, smaller, less bombastic but also less funny than we anticipated.
A barrage of bad jokes, offensive stereotypes and dated reference points, the movie is like Meet the Fockers on overdrive.
A sitcom with enough big laughs and emotional truth to get audiences past awkward pacing and some slow spots.
The cast is uniformly charming, while the script both promotes family values and tweaks stereotypes in the gentlest ways.
Director Scott Marshall and screenwriter Mark Zakarin pander to Jewish viewers the way Andy Garcia's The Lost City panders to Cuban Americans.
A fresh and lovable comedy about a dysfunctional Jewish family planning their son's bar mitzvah.
It is not particularly funny, which it very much wishes to be, and is even unintentionally campy on occasion.
If one were to compile a list of pop culture references that were barely funny three years ago, there would be a near-exact match with the gags tossed off here.
What begins as a scathing but loving satire of materialism loses its way once it turns into a warmhearted after-school special...
This is a good insight into the Jewish mind, whatever the heck that is.
The uneven humor, relying too heavily on stereotypes, leaves a distinctively sitcomy aftertaste.
>Keeping Up With the Steins is My Big Fat Jewish Rite of Passage... The best Jewish comedy since Annie Hall.
Keeping Up With the Steins begins as a growling, razor-toothed satire of carnivorous consumption in Hollywood. But after the first half-hour, those growls subside into whimpers.
Well intentioned but sloppily rendered, and unlikely to satisfy anyone but a very narrow section of the marketplace.
As director, Scott Marshall displays an unsurprising flair for selling a joke, but also a fine sense of dramatic pacing and, even better, a gift for brevity, neither of which, it could be argued, are innate skills of his famous filmmaking family.
While Marshall opted to pass up something dry and acidic in favor of a big bottle of Manischewitz, his movie is not without its pleasant charms, thanks to an energetic cast that manages to keep up with Marshall's highly amusing dad, Garry.
A tweener in every respect: It hasn't the nerve to offend anyone, yet it hasn't the flavor of warm-hearted comfort food.
Latest News for Keeping Up With The Steins
December 27, 2006:
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May 14, 2006:
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Tom Cruise's spy sequel Mission: Impossible III remained the most popular film in North America for the second straight weekend while the big-budget disaster film Poseidon... More...
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