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      Tennis, Anyone ...?

      2005 1 hr. 40 min. Comedy List
      43% 7 Reviews Tomatometer 42% 100+ Ratings Audience Score A Hollywood actor (Donal Logue) and his best friend compete in celebrity tennis tournaments. Read More Read Less

      Audience Reviews

      View All (7) audience reviews
      Audience Member Eh, could barely finish it. Few jokes here and there. Paul Rudd had an interesting appearance there... haha Rated 2 out of 5 stars 01/20/23 Full Review Audience Member A good movie that no one has heard of.. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/17/23 Full Review Audience Member I was a little biased the first time I saw this film. I met producer & star Kirk Fox at the Ashland Independent Film Festival, when my short film Lucky Shoes was playing there. He was an incredibly nice guy, we kept running into each other and he made sure to say hello each time. (And for some more name dropping.) I also got to briefly meet director and star Donal Logue a few years back when his film The Tao of Steve was playing at the Seattle Film Festival. So I felt like I had a bit of a personal connection to this film before I saw it, which I ended up really enjoying. That said, I know that I would have liked Tennis, Anyone? even if I had never met either of these guys. It's a fun indie-comedy, with a good spirit, that reaches beyond the surface ideas to be something more. Donal Logue plays Danny Macklin, an actor on a somewhat successful TV show, not too far of a stretch as Donal used to star on the somewhat successful TV show Grounded For Life. While exaggerated, I'm sure that he used a few of his Hollywood stories for the film. He meets Gary Morgan, played by Kirk Fox, on the set of an indie-film that they're in together. A while later, they run into each other at a party, and realize that they both have a major interest in tennis. Danny is an okay player, while Gary is a former professional, now a tennis-pro teaching kids how to play. They decide to team up together to play in a few celebrity tournaments and grow to be great friends. Jason Isaacs is hilarious as Danny's nemesis Johnny Green, he's a big time movie star who's old friends with Danny and can't help but rub it in his face every time they see each other; which happens a lot now that they're playing in tournaments together. Johnny gives Danny some terrible advice on how to advance his career, which starts an avalanche of terrible decisions, until finally Danny gets kicked in the face by a stripper and loses his TV show. Tennis, Anyone?, while having a lot of behind-the-scenes Hollywood stuff, and even more tennis scenes, is ultimately about two men finding themselves. Gary being very good at tennis, really wants to be an actor, but unfortunately isn't very good at it. Danny has made it as an actor, but isn't happy with his lot in life, he has to lose just about everything before he understands who he really is, tennis helps center him. There's a touching scene near the end, when Gary's dad dies and the boys spend a moment honoring him, it's handled with the right mix of humor and melancholy. The film hasn't had much attention, I didn't hear anything about after the festival, it's disappeared into animosity, I ran across it on IFC. Which is really a shame, it's a nicely made coming-of-age comedy, with some great performances from Donal Logue and Kirk Fox. There's also some fun cameos with Stephen Dorff as a country singer and Paul Rudd as a porn star. Donal Logue proves that he knows what he's doing behind the camera, while the film isn't a directing feast, he also doesn't make a lot of mistakes. If you like indie-comedies with some heart, you should give Tennis, Anyone? a chance. Original written for <a href=http://whatiwatchedlastnight.blogspot.com/>What I Watched Last Night</a> Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/23/23 Full Review Audience Member I had never heard of this, stumbled onto it by accident while on holiday. Its well funny and Donal Logue stars in and directs it so I had to love it, coz the man is a legend. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/26/23 Full Review Audience Member Donal Logue and Kirk Fox take a lazy, mediocre concept and pack it full of interesting characters and genuinely funny moments. A great Saturday afternoon movie. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/24/23 Full Review Audience Member not funny and very boring...i think i laughed at one part. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 01/20/23 Full Review Read all reviews Post a rating

      Cast & Crew

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      Critics Reviews

      View All (7) Critics Reviews
      John DeFore Hollywood Reporter A comedy so unfunny that its biggest laugh comes when an actor (for the second time) takes a tennis ball to the groin. Nov 29, 2005 Full Review G. Allen Johnson San Francisco Chronicle The question the filmmaker is asking, perhaps of himself, is a legitimate one: How worthy is a life that consists of nondescript supporting film roles, a lousy TV show and a string of failed relationships? Rated: 3/4 Nov 11, 2005 Full Review Chelsea Bain Boston Herald Rated: 1/4 Oct 21, 2006 Full Review Film Threat Rated: 3.5/5 Dec 6, 2005 Full Review David Elliott San Diego Union-Tribune The movie isn't deeply about anything, even including tennis, though it has a smartly rancid skill in spearing phonies. Rated: 2.5/4 Nov 11, 2005 Full Review Luke Y. Thompson New Times If you're a fan of the actors, it's worthwhile, but there's nothing much else to it. Nov 10, 2005 Full Review Read all reviews

      Movie Info

      Synopsis A Hollywood actor (Donal Logue) and his best friend compete in celebrity tennis tournaments.
      Director
      Donal Logue
      Screenwriter
      Donal Logue, Kirk Fox
      Genre
      Comedy
      Original Language
      English
      Release Date (DVD)
      Nov 13, 2007