Bedazzled
        Elizabeth Hurley stars as The Devil. For those wishing to sell her 
          their souls, the line starts here
        
If you could be anything in the world, what would it be? It sounds 
          like the kind of question that gets asked at a party that's gone on 
          way too late. Would you be a rock star? An athlete? Or would you just 
          want to be Brendan Fraser in Bedazzled, who gets to stand next 
          to Elizabeth Hurley in take after take after take, while she's wearing 
          a lot of skimpy skin-tight outfits? 
        Fraser plays Elliott Richardson, a hapless technical support guy for 
          a faceless software corporation (clearly, they make PC products, but 
          Elliott uses a Mac
hmmm
). Despite his best efforts at being 
          one of the guys, Elliott's co-workers shun him. Understandably though, 
          because Elliott is one of those guys who has absolutely no clue how 
          obnoxious he is, going to bed "
wondering why nobody likes 
          him." The one bright spot in his life, if you can call it that, 
          is his fixation on co-worker Allison Gardner (Frances O'Connor), whom 
          he spoke to about the weather once three years ago, and who fills his 
          fantasies every night. 
        Finally, after running into his co-workers at a local bar, Elliott 
          gets the courage to have a second conversation with Allison. In a misguided 
          effort to appear cool, he turns his back on her, so naturally she walks 
          away. Despairing, he utters the words "I would give anything to 
          have that girl in my life." Fortunately for him, Satan (in the 
          form of Elizabeth Hurley, and you just know that might be true) happens 
          to be in the bar at that moment. 
        The Princess of Darkness offers Elliott seven wishes to try to create 
          the right scenario in which Allison would love him. All she wants in 
          exchange is (all together now, in a scary voice) his soul. It takes 
          seven wishes, you see, because while the Devil happily gives life to 
          spoken fantasies, she also looks for loopholes in order to screw things 
          up. It's not for nothing that Hell has all the lawyers. Elliott ends 
          up as a famous writer, a basketball player, and the President, among 
          other things. (Mysteriously, a rock star fantasy, prominent in the latest 
          commercial for the movie, is nowhere to be found. It's distracting in 
          its absence.) Bedazzled plays out a somewhat predictable structure, 
          but with some real laughs behind it. 
        Writer/Director Harold Ramis has fashioned each wish in homage to The 
          Wizard Of Oz. The major players in Elliott's life remain the same people, 
          be it his boring day job or his existence as a Colombian drug lord. 
          (Elliott asked to be rich and powerful; he forgot to say moral.) This 
          allows for some great character work, especially by former Mad TV cast 
          member Orlando Jones. Toby Huss and Paul Adelstein, heretofore minor 
          character actors, make huge impressions with their flexible personas. 
          Of course, the movie could only work with a good actor at its heart, 
          and Fraser has a great time showing a flair for sketch comedy, though 
          he's helped by great make-up and special effects. In particular, his 
          basketball player self drips as much humor as he does sweat. 
        As the object of Elliott's affection, O'Connor gets little more than 
          the chance to be an object, though the Australian actress does have 
          a good ear for accents. Hurley basically changes costumes, but with 
          her naughty demeanor and ability to slink even when standing still, 
          it's somehow okay. The most unbelievable part about Elliott's deal with 
          her is that he never asks to see her naked. Wouldn't that be worth one 
          wish? 
        Oh, we're just too shallow. Despite a fixation on crotch jokes (it's 
          fashionable) Ramis seems to be after something deeper here, even if 
          he does reach a time-worn conclusion. As an update of the Faust legend 
          (and a 1967 Dudley Moore/Peter Cooke film of the same name), Bedazzled 
          naturally has to tell us something about our relationship to forces 
          greater than us. Though it starts off well in that regard, the movie 
          falters once Elliott finishes wishing. Those scenes rip along, carrying 
          the viewers on a giddy ride through a man's ego. Once Elliott is done, 
          though, we have to look at the moral questions involved. Instead, it 
          tries to back away from its initial premise that the Devil actively 
          works to corrupt mankind and steal souls away from God. Sure, we laughed 
          at the concept in action, but we shouldn't really have to look at the 
          darker side of that, right?
        In the 1967 film, Cook played a devil who was charming yet clearly 
          evil, trying to persuade Moore that he was just misunderstood. With 
          this version, though, Satan gets a happy ending; in Ramis' own words, 
          she's "more naughty than evil." (That should play really well 
          in Salt Lake City and The Vatican; does Satan get a writing credit?) 
          Rather than take a stand and risk offending anyone, we get reminded 
          that this Bedazzled has a lot of money riding on it. And so the movie 
          ends in pap, a victim of its deal with the studio Devil. 
        Despite that, Bedazzled makes for decent entertainment. It just could 
          have been more. 
        What's It Worth? 
          $5 
        
(review originally appeared on Daily Radar)