18
Mar/11

PAUL

18
Mar/11

Goofy sci-fi geeks Nick Frost and Simon Pegg find more than they bargained for in PAUL

PAUL (Greg Mottola, 2011)
Opens Friday, March 18
www.whatispaul.com

After having a blast with the zombie (Shaun of the Dead) and buddy-cop (Hot Fuzz) genres, cowriters Simon Pegg and Nick Frost look to the stars in their latest parody, Paul. Frost and Pegg play sci-fi writer Clive Gollings and illustrator Graeme Willy, respectively, geeky childhood friends who are in the midst of fulfilling a lifelong dream as they travel to San Diego for Comic Con, then set off on a road trip to such supposed UFO sites as Area 51, Roswell, and the Black Mailbox. Along the way, they meet a pair of gay-bashing rednecks (David Koechner and Jesse Plemons), a cool diner owner (Jane Lynch), and the Bible-thumping, shotgun-toting Moses Buggs (John Carroll Lynch) and his Bible-thumping daughter, Ruth (Kristen Wiig) — oh, and they pick up a cigarette-smoking hipster alien dude named Paul (voiced by Seth Rogen) who has escaped from the U.S. government. Rumbling cross-country in their RV, Clive, Graeme, Paul, and eventually Ruth are being hotly pursued by determined CIA agent Zoil (Jason Bateman) and Zoil’s two somewhat incompetent inferiors, Haggard (Bill Hader) and O’Reilly (Joe Lo Truglio), who aren’t sure what they’re after but are starting to believe it’s something big. The two legal British aliens and the illegal otherworldly alien begin to bond, but as Zoil closes in, they realize that this is no mere sci-fi story they’re in but the real thing. Paul is a hit-or-miss comedy that hits more than it misses, lovingly paying homage to the genre with references to such films and television shows as Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Alien, The X-Files, E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, Star Trek, Star Wars, and other faves. The road movie has its share of bumps, courtesy of director Greg Mottola, who previously helmed the overrated Superbad (2007) and the underrated Adventureland (2009), but Pegg and Frost are a hoot to watch, no matter what they’re doing.