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It feels like the majority of contemporary comedy films, whether insipid claptrap like American Pie and Wedding Crashers or superior fare like Knocked Up, have all become afflicted with the same formulaic malady—in a word, they're too plotty.
They take a potent comic premise, wring some laughs out of it, and then
get mired down in their final acts trying to wrap up the characters'
story arcs with a straight face, though the audience might not really
care. If anyone could get away with such a narrative transgression,
you'd think it would be beloved TV and movie veteran Judd Apatow, who's
proven adept at creating sympathic and endearing characters, from the
teenage ensemble cast of Freaks and Geeks (many of whom reappear in the film) to the middle-aged celibate of The 40 Year Old Virgin.
But here, though his skill at fashioning drama is satisfactory, it's
not really effective, particularly at a pregnant running time of 129
minutes. Knocked Up's about as swelled as its female lead's enceinte belly.

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