Extract

Extract

Category: (DVD)

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21 used, starting at $5.99

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Editorial Reviews

The creator of Office Space, writer-director Mike Judge (Beavis and Butt-head), moves from cubicles to the assembly line with Extract-- his outrageous return to workplace comedy, featuring a hilarious ensemble cast of quirky characters. About to sell his successful flavor extract company, life is almost sweet for Joel (Jason Bateman) until a freak on-the-job accident happens. Add to that his bored wife (Kristen Wiig), his laid-back, stoner best friend (Ben Affleck), a sexy con artist (Mila Kunis) who blows into town with dollar signs in her bedroom eyes, and a dumb gigolo and life as he knows it turns sour. Filled with laugh-out-loud one-liners and raunchy comedy, Extract is 100% pure hilarity.

Bonus Features include: Mike Judge's Secret Recipe Featurette The Ingredients For A Classic Mike Judge Film

Mike Judge is in a familiar zone in Extract, which is sort of a close relative to his cult classic Office Space. But this time the main character owns the company, instead of being a cog in the machinery, and middle age presents a different set of challenges. Joel (Jason Bateman) concocted a new approach to soda pop, and his small company is bubbling along nicely--in fact, there's talk he might get bought out by General Foods…unless something were to come along to really, you know, screw up the deal. Hmm, what could go wrong? Joel is sexually unfulfilled with his wife (Kristen Wiig), there's a new temp worker (Mila Kunis) at the factory who favors minimal clothing, and Joel's best friend (Ben Affleck), a slacker bartender, is bursting with bad advice. Oh, and there's an employee (Clifton Collins Jr.) contemplating a lawsuit because of a workplace accident that left him missing an important piece of equipment. The film's plot machinations are less enticing than the moment-by-moment behavioral observations, always a Mike Judge specialty. Examples: the chattering of the factory floor workers, who could easily have stepped out of a King of the Hill cartoon, or Joel's suburban neighbor (David Koechner at his chummiest), the kind of yakety-yak blowhard who simply will not shut up, however many polite messages he receives. It might not amount to a whole lot, and somehow the gifted Bateman seems underused here (Affleck, on the other hand, is having a ball). But Extract seems destined for cable-TV repeatability, much like its corporate cousin. --Robert Horton

Stills from Extract (Click for larger image)

 






Customer Reviews

Funny

Reviewed by SK, 2010-02-20

This is a funny movie. I was not laughing out loud but had a smile on face all the time while watching.

Great Movie Funny

Reviewed by Adam Lee, 2010-02-18

It is a funny movie but is not for little kids to watch but has everything you need in life drinking smokin sex ect

Atomic.

Reviewed by mark twain, 2010-02-15

After grimly watching the first twenty minutes of this movie, I turned the dvd player off, ripped out my eyeballs, then flushed them down the toilet as they had been terminally compromised by having been exposed. I then went to confession, confessing to my priest that I had seen parts of this film. He told me it couldn't be as bad as all that, so I showed him some scenes on my laptop, whereupon he put both barrels of a shotgun in his mouth and decorated the confessional with his brains. In his dying moments, he said to me, "The 1970s tv series Supertrain was much better than this."
[...]

Very enjoyable movie

Reviewed by WesternSky85, 2010-02-11

I really enjoyed the movie. I thought it was interesting, well written, and I definitely got a bunch of laughs out of it. And any movie starting with Johnny Paycheck and ending with Waylon Jennings is top notch in my book! Mike Judge you're the man! Its not gonna top Office Space, which is my favorite, but I liked it better than Idiocracy.

Couldn't Even Finish

Reviewed by The JuRK, 2010-01-27

I couldn't finish this movie.

Like the annoying neighbor who traps the main character in his driveway over and over again, I went into each scene wondering if anything was going to make me laugh.

Jason Bateman's character is nearly vacant enough for Paul Rudd to play. He owns a company and he doesn't get much from his wife...basically, he's a normal schmuck who isn't all that interesting. He employs bickering employees who aren't that interesting either. You would not want to hang with any of these people during or after work. Milas Kunis is a smokin' hot chick but she's such a despicable person, stealing and scamming from everyone in her path, that I hated her. So what that she's hot? Was her hotness supposed to offset what a terrible person she really is?

Ben Affleck plays a shaggy, stupid bartender who somehow tends bar in a Marriott or some upscale place--obviously a place that would never hire an unkempt moron like him.

There's a workplace plot that involves a character getting his privates mutilated and the impending lawsuit that could upset the sale of the company. Then there's a domestic plotline of a husband setting his wife up for adultery that has absolutely nothing to do with the workplace plotline...and none of this would matter if the film was remotely funny.

You'll see a lot of good reviews here but look for the key words, like "understated." That means that the movie is "not funny." "Subtle." "Not funny."

If I force myself to finish it and it does turn into a laugh riot, I will amend this review.