FortWayne.com
 
  Text size  Increase text sizeDecrease text size      
Posted on Thu. Jun. 28, 2012 - 12:01 am EDT

Movie review: 'Magic Mike' offers sex appeal with substance

PHOTOS
 
Click on image to view.
MORE INFORMATION
Film review

'Magic Mike'

What: A male stripper takes a newcomer under his wing and instructs him in the fine arts of partying, picking up women and making plenty of money.

Where playing: Carmike, Coldwater, Huntington 7, Rave

Running time: 1 hour, 50 minutes

Rating: R for language, brief graphic nudity, pervasive sexual content and some drug use.

3 stars out of four

MORE ARTICLES
DISCUSS
Comments
 

Steven Soderbergh makes movies about sexy subjects, then strips away the sexiness about them. He is fascinated by process, often to a clinical extent.

In recent years this has been true of “The Girlfriend Experience” (starring real-life porn star Sasha Grey as a high-priced Manhattan call girl), “Contagion” (about a viral outbreak that claims lives worldwide) and “Haywire” (featuring mixed-martial artist Gina Carano as a special-ops agent seeking revenge for a betrayal). Even the glitzy, star-studded “Ocean's 11,” one of Soderbergh's most pleasingly escapist films, takes its time laying out every detail of its ambitious Las Vegas casino heist.

Now he's directed “Magic Mike,” about the cheesy world of male stripping at a cheesy club in Tampa, Fla.

Yes, the dance numbers themselves exude masculine, muscular heat — how could they not with guys like Channing Tatum, Matthew McConaughey, Alex Pettyfer and Joe Manganiello strutting on stage in barely-there costumes?

But Soderbergh and writer Reid Carolin take us behind the scenes and linger over the minutiae of these performers' daily lives. They go thong shopping. They rehearse their routines. They lift weights backstage. And they count their dollar bills when “It's Raining Men” has stopped blaring from the sound system and their work is done.

Even the after-hours hook-ups with liquored-up ladies from the audience feel like one more obligatory step, like brushing your teeth before going to bed.

It all seems glamorous and thrilling at first for Pettyfer's character, Adam, who becomes known as The Kid. A 19-year-old neophyte in this neon-colored world, he serves as our wide-eyed guide once the more established Mike (Tatum) recruits him to be a dancer at the Club Xquisite male revue.

This is a movie that's tailor-made for groups of friends to get together and giggle and ogle at the spectacle of it all. And it is a lot of fun, but it's also more substantial than you might expect and more mundane.

Tatum, who's also a producer on the film, understands the allure of this lifestyle: He lived it when he was The Kid's age, briefly working as a male stripper before breaking into acting, and “Magic Mike” is kinda-sorta inspired by that time.

Anyone who's seen “Step Up,” the 2006 movie that put him on the map, knows what a gifted dancer he is. But here, he's just mesmerizing: confident, creative, acrobatic and, above all, seductive. 'Cause that's the whole point.

“Magic Mike” follows one long booze-infused summer as Mike, The Kid and their co-stars work the ladies while their boss, stripper-turned-club-owner Dallas (McConaughey), makes plans to expand to Miami. This is an excellent fit for McConaughey, who's doing some of the best work of his career lately between this, “Bernie” and the upcoming thriller “Killer Joe.”

Also showing an intriguing presence is newcomer Cody Horn as The Kid's older sister, Brooke, who tries in vain to help him find a real job. She has a strong but laid-back presence, and she remains the no-nonsense voice of reason when The Kid's hard-partying tendencies start spinning out of control.

Yes, “Magic Mike” is a bit of a formulaic cautionary tale about the perils of having too much, too soon. And the character who's the catalyst for The Kid's inevitable downfall, played by Riley Keough, is barely introduced and never feels fleshed out enough as a legitimate threat.

Mike helps keep this fantasy world grounded in truth; a self-described entrepreneur, he strips — and works construction jobs, and details cars — all in the hopes of saving enough money to start his own custom furniture business. There's nothing magical or even sexy about that: It's just the cold, hard reality of our time.

Come for the beefcake, stay for the economics lesson.


Comments
 
Saturday
Saturday
High 65 °F
Low 40 °F
46 °F
A Few Clouds
Sponsored by Fort Wayne Monthly magazine
TODAY'S DAILY DEAL
Daily Deal
Big Apple Bagels
$6 for $12 at Big Apple Bagels
TODAY ONLY
$6.00
50% off!
LOCAL BUSINESS SEARCH
Local Search
FeaturedMore
Things To Do

STOCK SUMMARY
Dow 15303.10+8.60
Nasdaq 3498.965+33.722
S&P 500 1649.60-0.91
AEP 47.71-0.57
Comcast 41.95+0.13
GE 23.53-0.13
ITT Exelis 11.90+0.05
LNC 34.48-0.32
Navistar 35.88-0.57
Raytheon 66.73-0.02
SDI 15.38-0.13
Verizon 51.39-0.50
  Stock Sponsor