Cast overview, first billed only: | |||
Bill Pullman | ... | Daryl Zero | |
Ben Stiller | ... | Steve Arlo | |
Ryan O'Neal | ... | Gregory Stark | |
Kim Dickens | ... | Gloria Sullivan | |
Angela Featherstone | ... | Jess | |
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Hugh Ross | ... | Bill |
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Sarah DeVincentis | ... | Daisy |
Matt O'Toole | ... | Kragan Vincent | |
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Michele Mariana | ... | Maid |
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Robert Katims | ... | Gerald Auerbach |
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Tyrone Henry | ... | Staffer #1 |
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Aleta Barthell | ... | Staffer #2 |
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Tapp Watkins | ... | Firefighter |
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Wendy Westerwelle | ... | Motel Clerk |
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Lauren Hasson | ... | Little Kid |
Daryl Zero is a private investigator. Along with his assistant, Steve Arlo he solves impossible crimes and puzzles. Though a master investigator, when he is not working, Zero doesn't know what to do with himself. He has no social skills, writes bad music, and drives Arlo crazy. In his latest case, Zero must find out who is blackmailing a rich executive, and when his client won't tell him, why. The only problem with this case is Zero has done something he's never done before: got emotionally involved. Written by MartianWax
A lot can be said about the superb writing that this film contains. It is also very well acted. But one thing that has always shocked me is just how emotionally involving it is. Darryl Zero's budding relationship with the woman, Kim Dickens, is so well written and acted that I believed every moment of it. Kim Dickens' character goes through some very difficult situations, and they all work. Ben Stiller's problems ring true, also. And I'd like to point out that his girlfriend is the woman Bruce Campbell has to defend in S-Mart at the end of Army of Darkness.
There are only a couple of criticisms I have of the film. The first ten or fifteen minutes seem to contain an entirely different style of comedy than the rest of the film. With Darryl Zero's horrendous guitar stylings and fridge full of TAB and tuna, I expected it to be an off-the-wall comedy or spoof of a detective film or something. The first time I saw the film, I was told how funny it was, and after I saw the ridiculous first ten minutes or so, I was constantly expecting the film to use slapstick and other such jokes. The film is funny, but if you go in expecting a comedy, or only a comedy, anyways, you're going to miss the emotional cues. Also, some of the discoveries and some of the trivia that Darryl Zero exhibits is a bit ridiculous. I mean, Sherlock Holmes, who was actually based on a real person, a college professor at Oxford, I believe, had amazing powers of deduction, but not even he could guess which bus Kim Dickens was going to tell her victim to get on. And I would also think that someone who does have the abilities that Darryl Zero supposedly has would never make up a job and tell that to one person, and forget that job and make a new one to give to someone else who frequents the same place as the first one!