| In 2005 Vince
Vaughn decided to recreate a Rat Pack assemblage of
improvised sketches and comedy sets involving some of
the greatest talents from the L.A. Comedy Store. He
decided to tour 30 cities across the Midwest and bring
a variety show to places that typically didn’t
see huge performances – a slice of high-quality
entertainment outside of the New York area. With special
musical and guest appearances, sensational variety show
performances and hilarious comic acts, Vince Vaughn’s
Wild West Comedy Show is a must-see documentary that
takes audiences from a variety of venues to behind-the-scenes
moments of the 30 day non-stop event.
Vince Vaughn hosts each variety show, introducing guest
stars Justin Long, Jon Favreau, Keir O’Donnell
(the gay, reclusive painter from Wedding Crashers),
Peter Billingsley (Ralphie from A Christmas Story) and
many others, performs in various skits, and then introduces
four hand-picked comedians who each do their routine.
Ahmed Ahmed, of Egyptian descent, raised in Riverside,
California, opens each stand-up segment and musters
great laughter with his edgy take on Arabs and the racial
profiling that he witnesses and has been a victim to.
Many of his jokes are based on real-life experiences,
including his incarceration at an airport with a police
record stating his offense was “Airport Rules”.
Initially unsupported by his parents, Ahmed stuck with
his passion for comedy and his love of movies and can
be seen in the upcoming films You Don’t Mess with
the Zohan and Iron Man.
Comedian John Caparulo distinguishes himself with an
extraordinarily foul mouth and sarcastic temperament,
and is easily one of the funniest stand-up performers
around. Taking stabs at cable TV men, porn and intelligent
dogs, his acerbic brand of humor is ruthlessly witty.
During the 30 day tour, two of the shows had to be kept
clean for reserved audiences, and John had particular
difficulty with his excessive language, and uproariously
found himself cutting of the punchlines of jokes that
concluded inappropriately. “It’s a really
cool thing to have a job that’s cathartic,”
he says, thankful for the opportunity to be working
with such an elite coterie of performers.
Bret Ernst is the most animated of the foursome, and
does a staggeringly accurate bit on skating rinks and
the cool kids that have all the moves versus the kids
who use the appalling rental skates. Italian waiter-turned-comedian
Sebastian Maniscalco delivers maddeningly humorous ribs
at Ross stores, apple martinis and girls in bars.
Instead of merely presenting footage from the different
cities and performances, Vince Vaughn’s Wild West
Comedy Show takes it a step further and fuses a reality-TV
behind-the-scenes camera to all of the interactions
leading up to the stage, as well as afterwards. Pranks
on the tour bus and the stressful condition of sharing
a room with four guys is continually displayed, often
contributing to the blurring of acts throughout the
venues. At times the group gets fed up with the claustrophobia
of it all, but ultimately it’s a once-in-a-lifetime
experience that everyone would ardently repeat.
While some cities barely get touched upon at all, and
several sketches are shown only in brief montages, the
film enlightens audiences well beyond a simple stand-up
routine. When the group changes its course due to storms,
and then proposes to offer benefit shows for survivors
of Rita and Katrina, a touching additional side of humanity
and cooperation is manifested that makes this collection
of stars much more than ordinary performers. Bringing
laughter to those in dire situations is a noble act
that certainly isn’t unappreciated – laughter
proves to be the best medicine, and everyone involved
is clearly bettered for having participated in this
unique and colossal road show.
- Mike Massie
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