2 reviews
Iina Kuustonen does what really gives a lift - gets herself in top notch physical shape for her fitness role. On her side Mikko Töyssy pulls points with his captivating emotional ability and refreshingly spontaneous delivery. A detail, rarely intriguing to follow, is how director Aleksi Delicouras keeps his main character's husband so passionately in the shades. The man apparently has brilliant ideas when it comes to story supportive images. The writing takes efficient use of know-how about diet and lifting techniques, but Pekko also pens what makes the movie drop the weights on the toes. The obvious disjointed commercial break feel in the story, origins from an overfeed of information about the gym staff's personal lives. Cut ten minutes of those brutal endeavors from the movie's first half and the smooth flow has the audience leaning in. I tested so it is a proven fact.
- Quarantaine
- Jan 14, 2024
- Permalink
It is a poor through-trials-to-success -movie. Screenplay is awful as dialogue is mostly laying out obvious and screaming. The so called plot twist is so stupid that it makes you wish it was made in secondary school contest. It would save some sympathy for the cause.
The theme is muscle fitness, but Punttikomedia fails to show why it is relevant. Rather this "comedy" makes the art seem naive.
The cast is not plausible for not a single one of the main characters remain relateable.
Still the main problem with this comedy is that it is not fun. Camp would've saved a lot of this nonsense but now the result meets the audience somewhere between embarrasment and pain.
The theme is muscle fitness, but Punttikomedia fails to show why it is relevant. Rather this "comedy" makes the art seem naive.
The cast is not plausible for not a single one of the main characters remain relateable.
Still the main problem with this comedy is that it is not fun. Camp would've saved a lot of this nonsense but now the result meets the audience somewhere between embarrasment and pain.