That’s His Boy: Anders Brings Us Broken Homes for the Holidays with Flaccid Comedy
Despite being able to rear his own children, Brad Whitaker (Ferrell) seems to have it all. He has a wonderful home and is married to the beautiful Sara (Linda Cardellini), and he’s adopted her two children from a previous partner. He works as an executive for a smooth jazz radio station and besides his boss (Thomas Haden Church) being sometimes inappropriate and the children’s reluctance to open up to him, life is good. When Sara’s ex, Dusty Mayron (Wahlberg) shows up out of the blue to become involved again with his kids, it sets off a competition between the men.
We’ve seen Will Ferrell caricature the schlubby ineffectiveness of the white suburban heterosexual male a few too many times now. Likewise, no one’s a stranger to the breathy threat of Mark Wahlberg and his pantheon of hard ass muscle men. Their rivalry for the affection of the children and the sexual attraction of their mother plays out predictably and obnoxiously, with the film’s biggest problem lurking in the characterization of Linda Cardellini’s Sara.
She’s dismayed at the use of the word ‘bitch,’ but jumps right on board when her son is urged to use it when he’s schooled in the art of emasculating other men to trump a schoolyard bully. The painfully awkward moment feels like watching a psychological hazing, and it is not redeemed by the sequence’s punchline during the film’s finale. Likewise, her character’s rationale for letting Wahlberg stomp all over her stable, secure, and emotionally available new husband never seems to make sense. “I just want my kids to get to know their dad,” she whispers in bed, but her actions never read as anything more than sabotage.
But enough railing on the film’s ignorance of female characterization or its inability to make subversive use of how heterosexual couples have interpreted the concept of ‘marriage’ since women were allowed to have a say in the matter. Daddy’s Home is clearly not trying to do anything daring, which it could have simply done by reversing the casting of Ferrell and Wahlberg. A rather small circle of supporting characters are used to supply secondary laughs, such as Hannibal Buress, Bobby Cannavale, and Thomas Haden Church. But all are notably flat because the film simply flings them at us as they utter improbable bits of dialogue whenever the narrative seems like it’s entered a flat spell.
For those who like Ferrell’s goonish side and Wahlberg’s posturing, they may enjoy an odd moment or two of their rapport. But scrubbed of profanity (Ferrell has to use the word ‘kripes’) and anything remotely adult robs the scenario of the usual physical gags audiences can use as convenient islands of reprieve between the formulaic beats.
But since Daddy’s Home is not really meant for ‘family entertainment’ and it’s also been neutered for an audience probably assuming it will at least tickle the basest regions of the funny bone, it’s relying on conveying a simple message to broken home families concerning relations between the biological parent and a stepparent—for the sake of the children, everyone should get along. And so, Anders film arrives like the chintzy Christmas gift you receive for free when spending more money at one particular outlet mall than you probably needed to.
★/☆☆☆☆☆