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'The Incredible Burt Wonderstone' not entirely wonderful


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SALT LAKE CITY -- Two nerdy kids find friendship and refuge from a distinct lack of popularity and even bullying when they discover the joys of magic. The future Burt Wonderstone and Anton Marvelton immerse themselves in perfecting and even refining the tricks of the famous Rance Holloway. Holloway's magic kit, complete with VHS instructional video, has fueled their passion for the art of illusion.

Here, the filmmakers flash forward to find Steve Carell and Steve Buscemi staring as Burt and Anton on the verge of launching their act at a major Las Vegas casino showroom. Rapidly, they become the hit of the strip -- complete with their own Burt and Anton Theater -- and nobody can take a character so ridiculously over the top better than Steve Carell.

But, let's get back to the story. Stardom starts to erode the friendship and the quality of their show as Burt becomes more and more egocentric and lackadaisical. Attendance starts to dip and the boys are about to be dropped by the casino manager, Doug (James Gandolfini). To make matters worse, a new "street magician" is dazzling and shocking the strip with his outrageous and masochistic stunts.

Jim Carrey stars as Steve Grey who will do anything, and I mean anything, for shock and awe.

In one last desperate attempt to regain their popularity, Burt and Anton stage a high profile stunt that not only fizzles, but is a major embarrassment. The partnership dissolves, and Burt especially careens into a downward spiral.

Reduced to doing kids parties and performing at retirement homes, Burt begins to find himself when he discovers his old hero, Rance Holloway (wonderfully portrayed by Alan Arkin) is a retiree in the home. But that's not all. His former on-stage assistant, the lovely Jane (played to perfection by Olivia Wilde) has a grandmother in the home as well. Rance and Jane have a renewing effect on our hero and could a come-back be in the making?

At this point in the film I was really beginning to fade. The drag factor and silliness had just about lost me. But as Burt begins to get his mojo back along with the infusion of Arkin's great talents, I began to re-engage. Along with that, Olivia Wilde finally gets a chance to shine and Buscemi returns. A chemistry gels as the four conjurers pull off the stunt of the century. And when you see the ins and outs of pulling off the stunt, well, it had me laughing out loud.

"The Incredible Burt Wonderstone" is not great cinema by any stretch, but the last 15 minutes really saved the movie. Still, just 2 ½ stars and it's rated PG-13.

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