There are movies that miss the mark. Then there are movies that miss the building entirely, fall into a dumpster fire, and get sprayed down by a confused fireman named Vinny. Oscar is that movie—a big, bloated attempt at screwball comedy where everything is moving except the laughter. Directed by John Landis and starring Sylvester Stallone in what amounts to a two-hour identity crisis, Oscar is the cinematic equivalent of watching a rhino try to tap dance: technically impressive, but sad and unsettling in equal measure.
Adapted from a French stage play (a sentence that already screams “box office poison”), Oscar wants to be a fast-talking, door-slamming farce in the tradition of Preston Sturges or Howard Hawks. What it actually is: an overstuffed meatball of miscast actors, a migraine-inducing plot, and Sylvester Stallone in a pinstripe suit trying to convince us he understands comedic timing.
Spoiler: he doesn’t.
