The documentary is more than comedic quips and sad clowns.
di Kevin Crust The Los Angeles Times
Its full title may be unwieldy and its humor a tad colorful for a family audience, but "Vince Vaughn's Wild West Comedy Show: 30 Days and 30 Nights -- Hollywood to the Heartland" is surprisingly endearing and chock-full of a genuine appreciation of the moment. The documentary, directed by Ari Sandel, chronicles the monthlong odyssey of Vaughn and four stand-up comedians he recruited from L.A.'s Comedy Store as they zigzag across the nation's flyover zone in a tour bus.
Vaughn, the perpetually "on" comic actor and star of "Swingers" and "Wedding Crashers," whose hangdog features and pleading eyes inject even his coarsest roles with a sense of melancholy, acts as emcee and a sort of big brother to the comics. [...]
di Kevin Crust, articolo completo (3950 caratteri spazi inclusi) su The Los Angeles Times 8 febbraio 2008