Of the seven
deadly sins, Pride is often singled out as the one that most
often leads to dismay. Ah, but what about Pride’s cousin
Envy? All to forgotten amongst the more lavish sins such as
lust, avarice, and anger, envy is often the gateway sin that
leads to bigger downfalls.
In the new film “Envy”, director Barry Levinson
introduces us to Tim Dingman (Ben Stiller), and his best
friend Nick Vanderpark (Jack Black). The two friends live
across from one another in a comfy suburb and work at a
local manufacturing plant. Tim is the focused one of the
pair who is happy for what he has and looks forward to
moving up the company ladder. Nick on the other hand, is a
dreamer who while solid in his reviews is always low in the
area of focus. Nick is a dreamer who is always looking for a
new way to come up with the next great invention.
One day, Nick gets the idea to make a spray to cause pet
waste to vanish. Coining the phrase “Vapoorize”, Nick
enlists the help of a person from work and they set out to
accomplish the task despites Tim’s constant efforts to get
Nick to abandon his dream and return to his senses, and even
refuses Nick’s offer to invest $2000.00 to become a
partner. Soon after Nick has a successful test of his
invention and in no time is rich beyond his wildest dreams.
Flash forward 18 months and Nick has remained in the same
suburb but has built a lavish mansion complete with a
carousel and every trapping of success. Despite his
continued friendship and generous gifts from Nick, Tim has
been on a slow burn and his wife Debbie (Rachael Weisz),
does not let him forget that all this could be theirs as
well if Tim would only have invested in the idea.
Tim eventually reaches a boiling point and loses his job and
family as his focus on what he does not have has completely
consumed him. Into the picture comes a drifter known as
J-Man (Christopher Walken), who mentors Tim on ways to knock
Nick down a peg or two and regain what he has lost.
Naturally things do not go as planned and Tim soon finds
himself scrambling from one crazy situation to another as he
attempts to recover from the trouble his envy has wrought.
Despite the presence of Stiller and Black the film seems to
be unsure if it wants to be a comedy, a black comedy, or a
social commentary. It seems as if Director Levinson
attempted to do all three and ended up failing miserably.
Walken does some nice work in his role but the comedic
situations that the film is rife with never come to fruition
and those that do are never explored to their maximum
potential. There is a funny scene involving a horse and
Stiller is great as the regular guy who gets in over his
head. For 2 minutes you think that the film is about to turn
the corner and become a series of madcap adventures.
Instead, the brakes are applied and the film never again
reaches this kind of potential.
Stiller and Black have some nice moments but they are
woefully restrained and not allowed to bust out with the
over the top energy and crazy brilliance that have made past
films so successful. They make a good team and it would have
been nice to have seen “Envy” be a comedic showcase
instead of a rudderless ship lacking direction that makes
you wish that they had sprayed Vapoorize on the print and
saved great talent like Black and Stiller from being wasted.