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‘Internship’ works

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COURTESY 20TH CENTURY FOX
20th Century Fox Vince Vaughn, left, and Owen Wilson, who co-starred in "Wedding Crashers" in 2005, team up again in "The Internship."
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COURTESY COLUMBIA PICTURES
Clockwise from top, the ensemble cast of James Franco, Jonah Hill, Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, Danny McBride and Craig Robinson star in “This is the End," which opens Wednesday.

From the very first moments of "The Internship," the buddy comedy starring Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson, it’s obvious exactly where it’s going. Two washed-up salesmen on the wrong side of 40 vie with a bunch of mouthy millennials for a job at Google. If you can’t guess that the geezers will teach the youngsters something about real life while the kids school them about Google Chrome, well, you’ve never seen a movie before.

‘THE INTERNSHIP’
Rated: PG-13
**1/2
Opens today

But, as the saying goes, it’s the getting there that’s half the fun. "The Internship" doesn’t break any new comedic ground and it will evaporate from memory upon leaving the darkened theater. But it’s an amiable, occasionally laugh-out-loud fish-out-of-water tale that gently mocks our modern technological age while simultaneously embracing it (and giving a big sloppy kiss to Google).

Best buds Billy (Vaughn) and Nick (Wilson) find themselves out on the street when the wristwatch company they work for goes belly up. After fooling around on the Internet, Billy finagles a way to get them into a Google internship program. A lucky few will be offered a full-time job at the end of it.

But there are two problems: Neither Billy or Nick knows anything about technology, and they’re twice the age of all the other interns.

Their very presence and incompetence enrages a snotty Brit intern (Max Minghella). A boo-hiss villain if there ever was one (he does everything but twirl a moustache), he takes it upon himself to kick them out of the running.

Meanwhile, Billy and Nick team up with other intern outcasts, who may know a lot about computers but little about social interaction, to try to outwit their competitors and the no-nonsense manager who oversees the program, Mr. Chetty (Aasif Mandvi). "The Internship" is "The Bad News Bears" with smartphones.

As directed by Shawn Levy ("Night at the Museum") and written by Vaughn and Jared Stern, "The Internship" offers a broad canvas for its two stars, last together in "The Wedding Crashers" in 2005. They riff off each other with abandon. One of the movie’s early highlights is their hilarious videoconference interview with a couple of earnest Google geeks (one of whom is played by B.J. Novak of "The Office").

Once on the corporate campus, Nick flirts with an exec (Rose Byrne) who, at first, is cool to his boorish charms. While the romantic element feels a bit tacked on and isn’t as funny as the main narrative, it’s nevertheless a showcase for the shaggy-haired Wilson persona.

The movie also plays up all the cliches of the Google workplace: free food, sleep pods and co-workers who all look like they’re in indie bands. Yet it’s never critical of Google, nor does it even mention controversies over privacy. (Be sure to stay for the end credits, and a clever takeoff on Google-isms.)

But no one goes to a Vince Vaughn-Owen Wilson comedy for a lecture. They go to see a couple of guys who are on their comedic game, and that’s just what the two deliver here.

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Review by Cary Darling, Fort Worth Star-Telegram

ALSO OPENING
For complete movie listings and schedules, see Friday’s TGIF.

“Not Today” (PG-13)
This faith-based production is about a 20-year-old from a well-to-do family traveling with friends to Hyderabad, India. His expectations to party hard are dashed when he refuses to help a starving man and his little girl. His conscience bothers him afterward, and when he attempts to right his wrong, he finds out the man was forced to sell his daughter, thereby opening the young man’s eyes to the thriving human-trafficking trade. (At Dole Cannery Stadium 18)

OPENING WEDNESDAY
“This is the End” (R) An apocalyptic comedy starring James Franco, Jonah Hill, Seth Rogen, Jay Baruchel, Danny McBride and Craig Robinson as fictional versions of themselves. The six actors find themselves trapped in Franco’s house when the party he’s throwing is brought to an unexpected end due to a series of cataclysmic events that ravage Los Angeles.

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Star-Advertiser staff

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