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Film Review: Lost & Found In Armenia

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  • Film Review: Lost & Found In Armenia

    LOST & FOUND IN ARMENIA

    Washington Post
    June 13 2013

    'Lost and Found in Armenia' movie review
    By Sean O'Connell
    Friday, Jun 14, 2013

    Jamie Kennedy is mistaken for a Russian spy in this broad, silly and
    dated mistake of a movie.

    While vacationing in Turkey, the American son of a powerful U.S.
    Senator accidentally parasails into the neighboring country of
    Armenia. Mistaken by local government officials to be a Russian spy,
    the man is mercilessly interrogated by his captors until a beautiful
    female student breaks through the language barrier and comes to
    his aid.

    Convince someone along the lines of Daniel Craig or Clive Owen to
    take the lead role and you've got the makings of a globetrotting
    political thriller. Cast third-rate comedian Jamie Kennedy, though,
    and you end up with "Lost and Found in Armenia," a broad, silly,
    dated and insensitive mistake of a movie co-written and directed by
    Gor Kirakosian.

    "Lost and Found" resembles those lowbrow, one-joke comedies Pauly
    Shore used to crank out near the end of his film career, just to stay
    employed - something like "Jury Duty" or "In the Army Now." Kennedy
    stars, but the majority of the movie leans on a mixture of Russian,
    Azeri-Turkish and Armenian performers speaking in their native tongue.

    As a result, "Lost and Found" relies heavily on subtitles.

    Unfortunately, reading the film's immature jokes doesn't make them
    funnier.

    Kennedy plays Bill, a senator's son whose heart recently was broken
    by a girl we never meet. His best friend, George (Dave Sheridan),
    coaxes him to go on vacation to Turkey, where Bill is expected to
    forget this shrew and start living life again. But the aforementioned
    parasailing accident carries our clueless protagonist to Armenia,
    where he contends with a village of suspicious peasants and eventually
    befriends a beautiful college student named Ani (Angela Sarafyan).

    Sarafyan, it should be noted, is strikingly beautiful, with an angular
    face and feline eyes that convey concern and empathy when she has
    to educate Bill on the hardships of life in Armenia. Because she's
    the only person in Armenia who understands English, she's tapped to
    be Bill's translator and, obviously, his love interest. Kennedy,
    meanwhile, isn't asked to do much beyond reacting to a series of
    idiotic sequences with a dumbfounded stare. He has that down pat.

    Kennedy might be the only recognizable face in the ensemble, but he
    largely takes a back seat as "Lost and Found" wastes chunks of time
    on the cartoonish physical antics of the Armenian townsfolk. Grandpa
    Matsak (Mikael Pogosyan) acts as the town's inept interrogator, prone
    to shouting at Kennedy or hitting him with a boot. Ahmed (Serdar
    Kalsin) is the camouflage-sporting village leader, who views himself
    as the local dictator and suspects Bill as being part of a larger
    espionage scheme.

    These aren't characters. They are one-note spoofs of cookie-cutter
    "foreign" stereotypes even Yakov Smirnoff would dismiss as tedious.

    The last time this style of hackneyed cultural humor generated
    significant belly laughs, episodes of "Hogan's Heroes" were an
    audience's only options. Forty years ago, Peter Sellers might have
    been able to squeeze laughs out of this tone-deaf material.

    But we've evolved, both as a society and as an audience. Specifically,
    we've seen Sacha Baron Cohen eviscerate imbalanced international
    relations in bitingly sarcastic comedies such as "Borat" and "The
    Dictator." By comparison, "Lost and Found" isn't quaint. It's obsolete.

    O'Connell is a freelance writer.

    Zero stars.

    Unrated. At AMC Loews Rio 18. Contains adult language and some scenes
    of violence. 100 minutes.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/gog/movies/lost-and-found-in-armenia,1251096/critic-review.html

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