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 The In-Laws
 Release Date - May 23rd, 2003
 Distributor - Warner Brothers
 Duration - 1 hr. 38 min.
 Type - PG-13 for suggestive humor, language, some drug references and action violence.
 Writer : Terry Doddand, Andrew Fleming
 Producer : Bill Gerber, Elie Samaha, Joel Simon
 Director : Andrew Fleming
 Starring : Robin Tunney, Candice Bergen, David Suchet, Drew Lee, Maria Ricossa
 Synopsis
When prospective fathers-in-law Steve Tobias and Jerry Peyser meet for the first time to celebrate their children's upcoming marriage, the cake hits the fan. Dr. Jerome Peyser is a mild-mannered podiatrist with a well-organized daily routine designed to eliminate all possible sources of stress. Meanwhile, daredevil CIA operative Steve Tobias moves through life like a heat-seeking missile. His average day consists of dodging bullets, stealing private jets and negotiating with international arms smugglers. Now he's giving potential father-of-the-bride Jerry a serious case of pre-nuptial jitters. Steve's dramatic entrances and exits, his cryptic references to a Russian runaway named Olga and his fight with a gunman in a restaurant washroom causes Jerry to see a vision of his daughter's perfectly planned wedding blowing up in his face. As far as Jerry's concerned, letting Steve into his family takes "til death do us part" way too literally. Before he can say the weddin! g is off, Jerry suddenly finds himself embroiled in the chaos that follows in Steve's wake as he is dragged kicking and screaming into a series of perilous adventures that take the mismatched in-laws-to-be halfway around the world.
 Critic Reviews
If it weren't for Albert Brooks, "The In-Laws" would be unwatchable. It's often unwatchable even with him. A loose remake of the mildly funny 1979 comedy "The In-Laws," which starred Alan Arkin as an uptight dentist and Peter Falk as a CIA agent, the current film substitutes Brooks as Jerry (now a podiatrist, for all those terrific foot-fungus jokes) and Michael Douglas as Steve (still an agent). As in the original, the pair are in-laws-to-be; Jerry's daughter, Melissa (Lindsay Stone), is marrying Steve's son, Mark (Ryan Reynolds). A total neurotic, Jerry is overly involved in the wedding, trying to control everything from the flowers to the food. Steve, an absentee dad his whole life, is trying to fit the wedding in while he saves the world from a rogue arms dealer (David Suchet) who's trying to buy a nuclear submarine. Inevitably, Jerry gets caught up in Steve's world of derring-do. He's stalked by other CIA agents who think he's some kind of scary superagent, and he's courted by Suchet, who thinks he looks really cute in a red thong. The movie trots along amiably for a while. Then, about halfway through, it just stops. It keeps going, of course, but it's a zombie-movie, staggering along with no brain. As always, Brooks is very funny -- especially when he's delivering lines he must have written or improvised himself. But the role is so one-note that, fuss and whine as he might, he can't pull anything more out of it. Douglas is pretty amusing as he goofs on his own dashing image. But he faces the same problem, and his parody gets weaker as the plot gets ever more ludicrous and overblown. The original "In-Laws" didn't need a nuclear sub. This doesn't either, but it thinks it does, and that's the problem.
  For rating reasons : filmrating.com, mpaa.com                                    For Parents : Parentalguide.com