Mike Myers, Elizabeth Hurley, Michael York, Mimi Rogers,
Robert Wagner. (PG-13, 87 min.)
The swingin' Sixties -- those were the glory days for international intrigue, eh?
When 007 could spook SPECTRE, UNCLE would thrash THRUSH, and superspies dressed for
the job. With Bond in his sleek black tux or John Steed with that dapper bowler or
Ilya Kuryakin in his oh-so-moody turtlenecks, our spies were sure to save the world
from whatever megalomaniac was out to enslave it this week. They had to; they had
better clothes! I mean, the whole spy game was all about style, wasn't it? Sure,
and Mike Myers knows that. That's why the hero of his comic tribute to Sixties superspies
is decked out in crushed velvet and lace, why his speech is spiced with "groovy"
and "baby," why his jet is equipped with a round, rotating bed. Grrrrowr! This secret
agent man has style to burn, baby! Which is a lot of what makes this send-up such
a fab gas. It nails with fond hilarity every garish, trippy detail of that era's
mutant mix of high adventure and high fashion: plastic dresses and velvet suits in
neon oranges and blues, bosomy temptresses, Space Age gadgetry, and preposterously
convoluted death traps. The look is spot on, down to the painfully phony rock walls
in the villain's mountain lair and cinematographer Peter Deming's overlit Sixties
style that washes out the color but keeps it lurid. The sound swings with Burt Bacharach,
Brasil '66, and George S. Clinton's brass-blaring homage to John Barry's 007 scores.
But this is Myers' baby, baby, and his script and twin turn as both Powers and his
nemesis, Dr. Evil, supply most of the laughs, zeroing in on spy-film style like Gert
Frobe's laser on Sean Connery's crotch. His Powers is a cheeky hipster, all go-go
lingo and love machine moves, despite an upper plate like the Yellowed Cliffs of
Dover and a thatch of chest hair off a nutria. And his Dr. Evil is the ultimate in
out-of-it oppression. Bald, scarred, and trapped in one of those truly bad, shapeless
gray jackets with no lapels and a high collar, this guy can't get a good look to
save his life. And he shows he knows it in a pathetically pouty lower lip. Perhaps
only people reared on this stuff will love Austin Powers, but there's more here than
the perfect recreation of Sixties absurdities and genre spoofery; there's comedy
that would be hilarious in any context. Austin Powers is the kind of movie Mel Brooks
used to make -- extravagantly funny, with plenty of juvenile humor, but as much or
more of it smart, delivered with a dead aim at a cultural milestone, affection for
its victim, and style. Lots of style. That's what makes it shagedelic, baby.
Full Length Reviews
Austin Powers 
Capsule Reviews
Austin Powers 
Other Films by M. Jay Roach
A Mystery 
Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me 
Film Vault Suggested Links
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Dumb and Dumber 
Beavis and Butt-head Do America 
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