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MeekinOnMovies On...The Secret Life of Walter Mitty

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty was a short story about a man with an oppressive wife, who constantly has flights of fancy in order to escape her meandering omnipresence. Due to its popularity and name recognition, a movie about the short story kicked around Hollywood for awhile, getting attached to names like Jim Carey before eventually finding its way into the hands of Ben Stiller, who stars and directs the very loose adaptation.  
Stiller's a great choice, as he's an actor who built almost his entire resume on willingly embarrassing himself in front of Robert DeNiro, Owen Wilson, Vince Vaughn, and most recently Eddie Murphy. In Meet The Parents he was brilliant at generating palpable uncomfortable silences that made the audience erupt with laughter. In Tropic Thunder he directed Robert Downey Jr to an Oscar Nomination for a comedy. Heck, the only reason Zoolander succeeded is because he played the titular character with such a serious earnestness you legitimately felt bad for the guy.
These are wonderful clubs to have in the bag if you're making a light hearted drama about a guy who thinks too much. And boy oh boy, does he come out swinging.

The story finds zone-out prone Walter Mitty (Ben Stiller) as a weak-willed, shy, introverted photo processor for Life Magazine. Naturally he's attracted to a girl at the office, and in a nice touch is so socially paralyzed he doesn't anguish about asking her out, no, he anguishes about sending her a 'wink' on Match.com.


Walter has fantasies ranging from saving the girl at work from a fire, to living with her in a weird Benjamin Button (another loose adaptation of a short story) kind of thing, and even little things like the right thing to say at the right time. The less outlandish ones sometimes go on for awhile before we snap back and see the scene was all in Walter's head. These scenes are irksome and annoying, not without purpose - ultimately giving us a window in Walter's world as both he and the audience feel the jerked around by his emotions. 

Eventually Walter finds himself butting heads with a new boss, slowly befriending the girl at work, Cherly (Kristen Wiig) and is ultimately charged with the task of locating a missing photo that's going on the cover of final print issue of Life Magazine.

That little motivating factor takes him from the dour grays and pale blues of the Life Magazine office to the welcoming lush green pastures of Iceland and the bone chilling cold of the arctic - ultimately exploring himself along the way. 

We've seen this kind of thing before - a person goes on a journey of unintended self discovery, often in exotic lands, and arrives at some form of personal enlightenment. See About Schmidt, The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Forest Gump, The Station Agent, and we can toss in that Julia Roberts flick where she goes to India.
The point is these flicks come in numerous permutations from buddy comedies to feminist rallying calls to even classic stoner comedies. 


Stoner comedy? Yep. The movie has a lot in common with John Cho's arc from Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle if you replace weed with geeky photography talk. There are moments of broad comedy, unexpected enlightenment, uplifting resolution, and a drunk guy (not Neil Patrick Harris) flies a helicopter! 


Walter and Harold's change in outlook doesn't happen right away, and they aren't so inept at the start of the movie that their change is impossible, either. But most importantly they're uplifting in a way that doesn't feel contrived or overtly melodramatic. 
Especially in Walter Mitty, where there are no grandstanding proclamations of love or tell offs to the boss, and instead the confidence comes via posture and eye contact. Ben Stiller looks almost like a completely different person by the end of movie, and the change is so subtle you don't notice until you do, ya know? 
The Secret World of Walter Mitty is a light hearted movie with a gentle touch that is entertaining enough for the masses, and speaks to a specific kind of soul who may stare at the wall too long or pour countless thoughts into his coffee instead of his conversations. There's a not-so-subtle subtext in how Walter goes from the dingy basement of a dying magazine to the top of a Himalayan mountain in the span of a two hour movie, perhaps saying that the way he got there was as simple as realizing he could.
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Comments

  1. Who asked for this??

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  2. MEekin, I want to defend you! Honest! But man, you aren't making it easy on you.

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  3. This is old poop Meekin, seriously. It's been on DVD and got mixed to bad reviews.

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  4. *Forrest Gump

    Boy, between this and your Gawker comments, you're on a roll today.

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  5. I was very torn on seeing this movie, since it only has a vague attachment to the story, pus i'm a huge Whitman fan, and I thought Stiller would ruin the story for me with this movie. Sadly, I wasn't far off. I felt it was a decent movie, but tying it even loosely to "Secret Life of Walter Mitty" gave it a aura of comparison that would hurt it ultimately. I think had it been given a different title and not tied to the story, it would have fared slightly better with critics.

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  6. Serious question; why do you change the font for these? Even if I had a desire to read them I would find that a little too irritating to deal with.

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  7. I love Meekin's obsession with "subtext", like he is the only one discovering these deeper meanings to the film that seem pretty obvious.

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  8. Mister_E_LogdriverJune 1, 2014 at 10:04 PM

    Yes! I've been wondering this!

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  9. davidbonzaisaldanamontgomeryJune 1, 2014 at 10:10 PM

    "In Tropic Thunder he directed Robert Downey Jr to an Oscar Nomination for a comedy."


    In blackface!

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  10. You're a huge Whitman fan that didn't know that it was James Thurber who wrote the story almost fifty years after Whitman died?

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  11. Yep, for some reason I've always attributed this story to Walt Whitman.....I'm obviously very wrong, but for some really odd reason, I do actually own a book that not only contains most of "Leaves of grass" but this and a couple of other short stories..l'm man enough to admit I'm wrong, so I'm wrong....still doesn't change my thoughts on the movie, just my thoughts on reading bibliographies more.

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  12. Litterally no one.

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  13. The commentary track on Tropic Thunder is hilarious as Downey does it in the voice of each character he plays in the part of the movie on screen at the time.

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  14. What the hell does "meandering omnipresence" mean? Using words you don't really understand has sorta been a theme for you today.

    >> due to its popularity and name recognition, a movie about the short story kicked around Hollywood for awhile>>


    I'll say, it's been almost 70 years since they made the movie the first time

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  15. I'm sure they're both in a lot of the same text books and anthologies

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  16. Stranger in the AlpsJune 1, 2014 at 10:30 PM

    I could sum up this movie in just a few simple words, and I don't even need a whole thread dedictaed to it.


    Overly ambitious and empty.

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  17. Mister_E_LogdriverJune 1, 2014 at 10:30 PM

    Why do you disappear for a few days and then come back with 2 columns at once?

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  18. or come back at all, for that matter.

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  19. CruelConnectionNumber2June 1, 2014 at 10:43 PM

    morelike Walter Shitty, amirite?

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  20. Just because you can post, doesn't mean you should

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  21. This comment might just have more substance then the above review.

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  22. Maybe if he Bo-lieves, he can become a better poster

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  23. Looks like Meekin's...seen better days.

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  24. ....yes he has....

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  25. I just got done reading your "FAQ" on the questions on why you reviewed a game apparently when your title has the word movies in it. I'm not sure what is more sad. You're awful reviews of awful movies or the fact that you think you have any more of a social platform than any other single person on the internet.

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  26. Virgil's Gimmick TableJune 2, 2014 at 3:08 AM

    This reads like a group of hipsters playing a game of mad libs.

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  27. He actually hasn't. It's just bad, bad, and some more bad.

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  28. When Meekin underwent liposuction, they stuck the tube in his medulla oblongata.

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  29. Meekin types these columns up, waits for a popular thread to start (such as a PPV live thread) them dumps them in after. That way anyone coming the the blog sees his post first instead of the more popular thread.

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  30. Jesus I think you may actually have a point.

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  31. AverageJoeEverymanJune 2, 2014 at 7:51 AM

    2 words "Shit Sandwich"

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  32. Most often he does them after Bayless' Daily Update posts.

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  33. That's a good way of getting people in.

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  34. And sadly, he'll keep posting films like this.

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  35. its a gimmick for someone that doesn't have enough talent to draw readers to his own work.

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  36. Mister_E_LogdriverJune 2, 2014 at 11:10 AM

    "Not as bad as you'd think."
    - Mark Henry

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