38 out of 47 people found the following review useful:
Sure, this is cheeseball comedy, but Jim Carrey makes it memorable., 17 July 2001
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Author:
Michael DeZubiria (miked32@hotmail.com) from Luoyang, China
Ace Ventura is the kind of comedy that stems directly from a TV show, and
in
this case, that show was probably In Living Color, where Carrey got most
of
his publicity before he became famous as a movie actor. A quick look
through
Carrey's filmography will prove that Ace Ventura is the film that really
acted as a springboard for his career. He had a few small roles in films
previous to Ace Ventura, the largest of which was probably his role as one
of the aliens in the awful film Earth Girls Are Easy, but after Ace
Ventura,
his career skyrocketed. The Mask (hey, he's still new, give the guy a
break), Dumb & Dumber, a sequel to Ace Ventura, Liar Liar, The Cable Guy
(oops), The Truman Show (ah, better), Man On The Moon, Me, Myself & Irene,
The Grinch, and there's no end in sight.
Sure, Ace Ventura does not compare to half of these movies, and is clearly
more on the side of the bone-headed comedy that he was doing on In Living
Color, but his talent is unmistakable. I first saw this movie when I was
in
high school, and I remember that I would ditch school and go to the
theater
to see it and I would laugh hysterically until my sides hurt every time I
saw it. There's something about seeing a slob at a tremendously rich party
who just doesn't care about the etiquette of the rich people. Did anyone
not
laugh when he was `testing' the food at Ron Kamp's
I'm-the-richest-man-in-the-universe
party and stuck his tongue out at that poor guy next to him? That whole
scene at that party is classic!
And, of course, it only gets better with Ace's dealings with Lois Einhorn.
The whole crying game idea may have gone a little too far, but it was
always
amusing. Jim Carrey saves Ace Ventura from sinking to the totally
brainless
level of more recent crapfests as the Scary Movies, and even makes this
into
one of the better comedies of 1994. This is not the type of movie that is
likely to win any awards, but you will remember the hilarious dialogue and
Jim Carrey's immediately recognizable rubber-faced antics in this film
that
served as a spring board to his career, which later brought us many more
excellent movies. Way to go, Jim.
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