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YES MAN (PG-13 for a couple f-words, strong scenes of sexuality, the usual Carrey sexual vulgarity, brief nu)

Remember "The Truman Show?" "Man on the Moon"? They were exceptions to Jim Carrey's rubber-faced, farcical comedies that never rose above the mediocrity of their scripts - proof that the guy has tremendous talent, sadly wasted on the likes of "Liar, Liar" and now, lower still, a sad disappointment here. One wonders if he has trouble finding good scripts; certainly this one from a trio of writers has the look and feel of standard material patch-and-stitched to suit Carrey's talents. What is it, a satire? Cynical comedy? Romantic love story? Morality play? All of the above?

To begin with, 46-year-old Carrey is seriously miscast as a party groupie among 30-ish guys, falling in love with 20-ish Zooey Deschanel - in an age problem that, especially in close-ups, is uncomfortable to witness. He plays a man with a totally negative attitude toward life until he meets a kooky girl (Deschanel) who guides him to a guru (Terrance Stamp) for positive thinking ("Yes is the new No") and sends him into a series of silly, unrelated situations - pick up a vagrant, lend him a cell phone & money is how it starts - on & on in the absurd manner of the "Liar, Liar" character, but lacking the cleverness found in that film.

Deschanel saves the day with her role as the stereotypical odd but likable character, while others, like Rhys Darby, as his boss with a penchant for throwing stupid costume parties, help dilute Carrey's awkwardness in a script & role he doesn't appear at all comfortable with - mugging desperately when there's nothing else for raising a chuckle now & then.

One pleasant, brief scene stands out: Carry & Deschanel stumble one night into the empty Hollywood Bowl; nothing much happens, but the feel of a lone couple on that huge stage facing empty seats - touching.

D+

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