Case #8: Detective Duncan & The Case of The Frustrated Romantic or The D.V. Detective Divides Knocked Up and 27 Dresses

The name’s Duncan. You know, the D. V. Detective. Things have been pretty good… except when a mix up in inventory labels separates me from owning my new cell phone. Who’s running that store? Laurel and Hardy? The Three Stooges? Wall Street bankers? I shouldn’t worry, though. I have a phone that still works – too bad I gotta go home to use it. The wiring in this building has gotten so bad that now when I turn on the light, my air conditioner goes off. What good is it to be cold, in the dark, in late September? It’s pointless to whine about it. I can’t buy the damn phone now anyway. Thanks to my unreliable credit card. Over limit charge? What was I supposed to do, not pay for the plunger? The line at Duane Reade was way too long for me to step off, go home, get the five dollars I forgot to bring seconds after finding my toilet overflowing. I had to get it fixed ASAP. Better move onto the reason why you all came to this site in the first place. How ‘bout I tell you how I got two paychecks from one case? It’s the one I call: The Case of the Frustrated Romantic.
The way she walked into the room, it… didn’t do anything for me. I wasn’t sure how to describe how a woman sprints into an office and expect to be properly ogled. She talked as if she was paying me by the minute. In between her nervous chatter, I happened to pick up her name: Sharon Dexter. Her word count stumbled when I threw out a Devil Wears Prada reference. Sharon wagged her finger at me like an off-duty subway toll booth clerk and said that was the extent of her problem. She needed viable research focusing on the difference between male and female centric romantic comedies for an upcoming lecture. Either she met her 36-hour deadline or her promotion would hang precariously like my patience with the crap that’s been happening to me lately. She offered to pay me for the research along with my usual fee. I would’ve settled for the fee, but I needed the extra dough for that extra over limit fee.
As I was walking home, I wondered what the hell was I going to do. I’m not the most objective person when it comes to chick flicks. How do I report what I think without coming off as if dissing the Sex and the City movie was part of my male rites of passage? I wasn’t sure if it was the constant car honks or the smell from infinite amount of exhaust pipes, but I managed to conjure up two movies I can compare and contrast the male and female psyches. Okay. Alright. The idea came from a half-ripped Grey’s Anatomy poster on some scaffolding. Katherine Heigl’s face nearly survived the onslaught of overzealous street promoters. She starred in two notable romantic comedies. One male centered Knocked Up, the other female centered, 27 Dresses.
I reached my apartment, grabbed a beer from the fridge then spent the night watching people spill their feelings like horror victims spill their guts. Afterwards, I opened my laptop and typed the following:
Ben: Are you shocked people bought that I knocked you up? Allison: More so.
Ben: Are you shocked people bought that I knocked you up? Allison: More so.Male and female centric rom-coms can be summed up like this: In 27 Dresses, Jane (Katherine Heigl) sets out, I mean, pines for her boss, for love. In Knocked Up, Ben (Seth Rogan) finds love because he has no choice. But let’s get under the unisex shirt for a moment. These two flicks have surprising similaries as well as glaring differences.
Since romantic comedies are modern fairy tales for women, Knocked Up is the contemporary wet dream for men. That’s the only way I can explain why a woman who snagged an on-air gig on a celebrity cable channel slept with a slacker like Ben hours later. It almost made Dudley Moore’s romp with Bo Derek in 10 believable. Look, the male fantasy is as old as my pick-up lines. My question is why was Allison not turned off by Ben and his friends before she got drunk? I guess the movie wanted to convince the audience that she was nice and not one of those social climbing, golddigging types who happen to sport a beautiful face. Does that mean she should’ve ignored Ben? No. The talking, the dancing, the drinking, I’ll buy. The sex… not so much. Could it have happened? Yeah. So could skinny dipping at minus ten degrees. However, if women can hang long enough after Allison told Ben that she’s pregnant, they’ll warm up to the flick.
On the other side of wishful thinking, 27 Dresses featured Jane, a woman who didn’t have it in her to say no to the point of spending a lifetime wearing ugly bridesmaid dresses. The one upside to this flick: James Marsden finally gets the girl! He passed “the perfect guy, but not perfect for the main girl” role to Edward Burns. Here’s the number one reason why chick flicks lost favor even among chicks: moviegoers turn into psychics. In fact, if Vegas bet on these plot points, the whole industry would go out of business. Case in point, the movie began showing how Jane caught the wedding dress bug at the tender age of 8. She saved her Aunt’s wedding by helping the aunt make her dress look perfect. Yet, it’s not enough for us to see it, grown-up Jane had to narrate just in case viewers couldn’t get what was going on.
But in closer examination, are these movies really that different? Both films wasted much screen time persuading the paying public how each protagonist had faults. The major contrast was in how those faults were expressed. Knocked Up explored in several ways how clueless Ben was to Allison. Whereas 27 Dresses Whereas 27 Dresses showed how clueless Jane was to herself. That’s the underlying theme, isn’t it? Men are jerks to women and women are jerks to themselves.
Hi, I’m James Marden. Just so you know, your’re not allowed to dump me for someone else.
Hi, I’m James Marden. Just so you know, your’re not allowed to dump me for someone else.Then we’ve got the scenes where its necessary to build evidence to justify how the chosen couples bonded as smoothly as soap slipping down a shower curtain. For Knocked Up, the couple went to doctor’s appointments, shopping at baby stores, Ben inviting Allison to his place to meet his friends then they had more sex. In 27 Dresses, Jane and Kevin registered items in an upscale store, they laugh and act goofy during a montage of Jane wearing each dress at her apartment, they sing and dance after getting drunk in a bar, and they have sex in the back of Jane’s car. The huge zit on the nose difference was when these couples got horizontal. This, again, represented the general attitudes between the worlds of Venus and Mars. For men, sex before bonding (Knocked Up). For women, bonding before sex (27 Dresses).
Another similar, but different instance was how the protagonists licked their wounds after the major bombshell that broke them up for good… until the climax of the third Act. In 27 Dresses, Jane sulked in her apartment as her Bridezilla sister, Tess, berated her after Kevin put Jane’s hobby on blast in the front page of the New York Journal. In Knocked Up, Ben needed his boys to help enjoy lap dances in a strip club after Allison kicked him out of her car, in the middle of the street, when he showed no sympathy for her sister.
Going even deeper, these films weren’t that different, after all. Both Ben and Jane slept with their love interests, both realized they had to change in order to keep their relationships and both women in these films found their “Mr. Wrong” was right for them before the credits rolled. In other words, Knocked Up and 27 Dresses were deceptively traditional. A guy knocked up a girl and through the advice of his father took responsibility for the result of his one night stand. A girl took off her rose colored glasses, grew a spine and got married in her own, tailor made Bridal gown.
Ben: How cute do I look? Allison: Enough to convince people we are actually sharing a meaningful moment
Ben: How cute do I look? Allison: Enough to convince people we are actually sharing a meaningful momentThe real difference was the tone. Knocked Up is the millennium update of the Kevin Smith 90s slacker movies. But even this comparison isn’t quite right. Clerks, Dogma, and Chasing Amy were more experimental. Yes, Judd Apatow and Kevin Smith featured slackers, abrasive language, and Star Wars trivia. But the subjects these writers/directors grappled with were as distant as the coasts in which their characters reside. While Knocked Up had people smoking weed, Clerks had two characters selling weed. As Ben and his friends watched two women kissing, Randell watched hermaphrodite porn while Caitlin unknowingly had sex with a dead guy. But the weird thing is, other than what I just mentioned, Smith’s films can arguably be more palatable to women because of one thing: dialogue. It’s the Cyrano de Bergerac rule of attraction: It doesn’t matter how you look, it’s what you say that gets you laid. Throw in some poignant insights from the most unlikeliest of characters (two drug dealing do gooders come to mind), and women are as drawn as some are to death row inmates.
Getting back to the major point, if movie goers peel back the vulgar veneer, they’d find a tame storyline. Ben did what those Clerks guys couldn’t do, find a good paying job, move out to a nice apartment and start family life. The one night stand was the springboard for Ben to join the rest of normal society.
Was this made for Little Bo Peep or The Wizard of Oz?
Was this made for Little Bo Peep or The Wizard of Oz?27 Dresses tone was as transparent as Sports Illustrated publishing a swimsuit issue. What drives men to desert a movie like this for an extended “bathroom break” is the naked desire of marriage being hammered from the get-go. Knowing this, the film neatly packed this sentiment inside Kevin, Jane’s Mr. Right disguised as Mr. Wrong. His job was to jar Jane out of her delusions like Cher did for Nicolas Cage in Moonstruck. However, Kevin restrained himself to just hurling snarky banter to try and cause sexual tension. Another annoying habit with most female driven stories is having their protagonists feel sorry for themselves. When Jane unleashed how “compatible” her sister Tess was with George (Jane’s boss and crush) during the engagement party, Jane’s best friend, Casey, convinced her to feel bad for finally standing up to the spoiled brat. This was the best scene in the movie and it was ruined. As Jane spoke the words Tess wanted her to say, she let the slide show pictures tell the real story. And in the scene most likely to win the “been there, done that” award was Jane’s tension-filled race to catch up to her one true love before he’s gone forever. Professing that love in front of a bunch of strangers and heighten her embarrassment if Kevin rejected her came in at a close second.
Allison: Check it again. Sister: I did. 5 times. Hey, you’re the one who wanted to be in this flick.
Allison: Check it again. Sister: I did. 5 times. Hey, you’re the one who wanted to be in this flick.The substantive similarities between Knocked Up27 Dresses smother the surface differences like tangy A-1 sauce smothers a brunt piece of steak. They both feature nice, career oriented women who need to loosen up. Yet, it’s the female oriented flick that presented the woman as a push over, go figure. Both movies settled into romantic conventions; they only detoured in tone and points-of-view to get to the same result: starting life with the person they love.
The proofreading and spell checking took only a few minutes then I emailed Sharon.
The next day, the reward for using my brain cells was left on my desk. The woman who sent it was busy fine tuning her lecture. In a way of showing her gratitude, Sharon invited me to see her rattle off my research. I scrambled for an excuse until she mentioned the disproportionate amount of women who will be in attendance. Now that The Case of The Frustrated Romantic is done, I gotta go hop on the subway. It’s not everyday to hear my work and see women’s reactions ripple through the audience.
Thanks for visiting, everybody. Come back next time. Oh, gotta speed this up, I’m gonna be late. I’m Devin V. Duncan, the D.V. Detective, logging off.
Case #3: Detective Duncan & The Case of The Improbable Task or The D.V. Detective Delves into Wall-E

The name’s Duncan. You know, the D. V. Detective. I just bought something I accused others of having just so they could look important, which helps elevates one’s status, which helps elevates one’s chances of getting dates. So far, the only thing this cell phone has gotten me is annoyed. What the hell am I supposed to do with rollover minutes? And I have to spend extra hours to practice texting so that my thumbs can reach the hard to reach buttons, and what’s up with that lingo? It has gotten to the point where I’m sporting the same confusion most of my clients suffers each time I open my mouth. One client immediately comes to mind. I called this: The Case of the Improbable Task.
I could tell the way Kate McConnell’s eyes grabbed on to mine that I was her last hope. As a small hint of her exotic smelling perfume wandered into my nostrils, she made her case. She needed a movie to get her kid. Not just any kid, her daughter was the kind of ten-year-old prodigy who’s either on her way to revolutionize an industry sector or waste away in a rubber room. Kate needed a flick to be intellectually stimulating, yet entertaining enough to keep Kate awake. After rattling the standard Harry Potter, and Disney picks, Kate cocked her head as if she could tell how much I hoped that third button would pop off her blouse. Not only was Kate expecting me to recommend a flick hours before picking up her kid from prep school, I was expected to do it in a way that preserve her daughter’s geek cred. Despite my skepticism, Kate’s hypnotic violet eyes and her check for ten G’s gave me enough incentive to believe in miracles.
There was no time to watch Kate leave, I couldn’t even leave the office. I had three hours to find a movie that was as improbable as crossing 42nd street at… any time of the day. I opened the laptop and started looking for inspiration. Just then, the answer rushed inside my mind like a familiar TV theme song. What was the top kids movie from last season? The movie many had thought should’ve contended for Best Picture? The movie that made rundown, rusty trackers look good? No, not Cars. I downloaded Pixar’s best production to date, Wall-E. Afterwards, as the credits rolled, I typed the following:
Wall-E: Are you sure dinosaurs were called humans? Cockroach: Look, it’s been so long, all species look alike to me.
Wall-E: Are you sure dinosaurs were called humans? Cockroach: Look, it’s been so long, all species look alike to me. Space may be the final frontier, but at some point you’ve got to go home. If that’s the best way to sum up this film, you need to find your humanity. Only Pixar could turn a grim future into a heartwarming redemption of the human spirit. That’s the ingredient lost or considered an afterthought in most adult movies. Yet, Wall-E was as much of a kiddie movie as a wino makes his living out of a paper bag. In a film culture that barrels through movie plots faster than a bullet, it’s refreshing how Wall-E just shut up, slowed down and allowed people to absorb sights and sounds they had paid to experience.
From the start, my perception of futuristic tales shattered by the sounds of a melodic past. My gloomy tinted glasses refocused once the camera crashed into what seemed like a metal asteroid field, a farewell gift the human race had given the robots to clean up. However, that had to wait. A planet full of trash had to be picked up first. Besides, moviegoers had to see where the music was coming from… a robot. One robot. The only robot still functioning on the entire planet. It ran for so long, it made the Energizer Bunny die of embarrassment. This small, diligent machine was named Wall-E (voiced by famed Star Wars sound designer Ben Burtt). He also had time to adapt beyond its programming. How much time? About 700 years. Despite the bleak landscape, Wall-E’s curious nature grew with every interaction with each item he had collected. While roaming through the dissolute terrain, the electronic pop-up ads felt as ancient as the Egyptian Pyramids. They also compacted the plot as neatly as Wall-E compacted the garbage. The ads serenely transformed the desperate need for people to flee Earth (due to their own neglect and excesses) into a five-year, once-in-a-lifetime pleasure trip on a luxury space cruiser. As Wall-E worked alongside the worst act of human nature (destruction of a planet), he came home each night and yearned for what was best in human nature (love). For him, it was personified the classic musical Hello, Dolly.
I’ve seen this thing for hundreds of years and I still can’t figure it out.
I’ve seen this thing for hundreds of years and I still can’t figure it out.Wall-E’s lonely existence changed when a gynormous spaceship landed on right on top of him. The spaceship’s arrival was as awe inspiring as 2001: A Space Odyssey, Close Encounter of The Third Kind, and the first time the Imperial Star Destroyer made its appearance in the original Star Wars. His dream came true when he set his mechanical eyes on a beautiful robot named EVE (Elissa Knight). She was a probe sent to discover any organic life signs on Earth. Wall-E and EVE’s interaction followed the classic pattern of screwball romantic comedy. Wall-E was the unconventionally likeable, charming and persistent. EVE was aloof, attractive, rich (in this case, much more advanced) and only focused on her work. She was as unattainable to Wall-E as six-pack abs is for Santa. EVE literally blasted perceived treats faster than a person’s hope of ever getting money back from a friend. Her heavy-handed over reactions didn’t scare… okay, it scared him, but it didn’t stop him. She eventually let her guard down and let Wall-E usher her through his world. Her gentle giggles were as delightful as his hopeful wonder. Two things grabbed EVE’s attention: the screen showing people dancing and singing, and a plant kept inside a boot. After analyzing it, she reacted as if she was kissed by her favorite Soap star. She grabbed the plant and shut down, leaving Wall-E as puzzled as any guy who had witnessed his dream girl go nuts.
No matter how much he cared for her and protected her from the elements, EVE didn’t respond. It was as if Wall-E got played for a sucker. She got what she wanted now she was treating him like the stuff he was supposed to clean up. In fact, she waited for her ship to blast her back into space, intended to never see Wall-E again. But like any lovesick fool, he wouldn’t let go. He clung on to her spaceship harder than a child’s wish for snow to keep him home from school. The shuttle headed for the AXIOM, the starliner that shipped out of Earth’s orbit 700 years ago.
Once Wall-E boarded the ship, security-bots took EVE away. Wall-E shifted into hero mode to free her. Along the way, he witnessed the ultimate “before and after” testimonials in reverse. When the global President and B&L CEO Shelby Forthright (Fred Willard) hawked the five-year vacation to paradise, the people in the ad were fit, active and directly engaged one another. On the 700-year anniversary of the cruise, people were morbidly obese, zooming around in their hover chairs and talking at their screens like zombies. There was no need to walk or even look at anyone face-to-face. Why should they? The robots catered to their every need. Until Wall-E. While scrambling to find EVE, his accidental interactions with John (John Ratzenberger) and Mary (Kathy Najimy) disrupted their hypnotic state and freed them from their virtual prisons.
Meanwhile, EVE was sent to report to the captain (Jeff Garlin). She informed him of her findings that would initiate Operation Recolonize. The plan was so forgotten, the captain had to rely on Auto, the ship’s auto pilot, to show him how to read and turn the pages of the owner’s manual. However, the captain’s history lesson turned out to be as worthless as a 401k account. The plant EVE stored inside her was gone. She couldn’t understand how it disappeared. Without it, she couldn’t complete her directive. When she was taken to diagnostics to be repaired, Wall-E found the downside to being the hero. His overzealous rescue singled him and EVE out as rogue robots.
EVE: If I wanted a savior I would’ve beeped for R2-D2.
EVE: If I wanted a savior I would’ve beeped for R2-D2.Once they had escaped, they caught one security-bot throwing the plant away in an escape pod. Before EVE could stop him, Wall-E entered to get the plant, but trapped himself in a pod that was set to explode. What they, and apparently everyone else on the ship, didn’t know was that Auto and the security-bots were running on a top-secret directive. The President and B&L CEO Forthright had sent an override order A-113 to cancel Operation Recolonize. It had become too toxic for people to return to Earth. But the order was sent 700 years ago. Unlike Wall-E, these robots couldn’t operate beyond their programming and carried out the order as if Forthright was still alive.
After Wall-E saved himself and the plant, EVE’s joy wasn’t just based on her directive, she was beginning to fall for him. Despite Wall-E, EVE and the captain’s determination, Auto’s A-113 order was like giving Popeye his spinach. Auto’s mutiny against the captain wasn’t like Hal 9000’s actions in 2001: A Space Odyssey. Hal’s gain for power was as greedy as NY’s MTA imposing fare hikes. Whereas, Auto was just following orders. As the captain learned more about his ancestral home, he felt compelled to do something useful like, steering the AXIOM back to Earth. Auto had other ideas, which include electrocuting Wall-E, locking the captain in his quarters and alerting all bots to stop EVE and Wall-E, treating them as enemy combatants.
During all this, EVE’s feelings for Wall-E deepened. The image of her sleek robot arm caressing his metal head was more touching than many live action chick flicks. Like any new rebel who finally found a cause, the captain planned his attack to take back control of the ship. While this struggle went on inside the bridge, EVE flew Wall-E to the place where the plant could initiate the course back to Earth. This simple task had a tremendous cost. Wall-E’s body was crushed beyond repair.
EVE: No robot, I mean, no robot is allowed to scare Wall-E except me!
EVE: No robot, I mean, no robot is allowed to scare Wall-E except me!Once the AXIOM landed on Earth, EVE flew to where Wall-E called home and frantically rebuilt him. The second his emotionless eyes stared at her, she desperately tried to remind him of what he loved most. However, she realized his new motherboard lacked all the memories he had accumulated. All of the curiosity, the yearning, the charm and the wonder was wiped away. The feeling of shock and emptiness were as uncomfortable as suffering through a power outage on a summer night. Fearing she had lost Wall-E forever, she “kisses” him, creating the same spark it had during their carefree dance in space. Just like an amnesia patient, the spark brought his memory back, proving that love was stronger than his programming.
What was remarkable about this film was how realistic it was compared to Pixar’s other work. It paralleled with the world of Serenity. The Joss Whedon ‘verse was set more than 500 years in the future and all the resources from “The Earth that Was” had been used up. The people were forced to leave the planet. Another similar aspect between the two movies was how an entire society lived under a global corporation. Wall-E had Buy and Large – B&L; Serenity had the Blue Sun Corporation. What differed greatly between the two was the tone. Wall-E still offered a chance for human kind to redeem itself. In Serenity, Earth was a grim afterthought. Humans braved life on planets they had colonized and terraformed (creating atmospheric conditions much similar to Earth’s). Also Blue Sun was more sinister with their covert operations, including kidnapping children and programming them to become assassins for the state.
In addition, all the robots in Wall-E sound like robots, not humans. However, Wall-E turned out to be the most human out of all the characters. What puzzled me was the different responses filmgoers had for Wall-E and Jar-Jar Binks from the Star Wars Prequels. They’re both reactionary characters, both suffer the brunt of their actions. Their comedy is based on timing and luck, but people loved Wall-E and still hate Jar-Jar. Why? Jar-Jar was introduced within a long revered film franchise. His bumbling benevolence was as welcomed as an ex-con dating a cop’s daughter. With Wall-E, he and his setting were new, which gave the robot a chance to develop his character. Also, his movements weren’t as awkward and his sounds were short and expressive like another iconic robot, R2-D2. Also, Jar-Jar’s style of comedy wasn’t what Star Wars fans expected or wanted after nearly two decades. There were light moments in the original trilogy, but the tone of the characters, even the droids, remained serious. Wall-E also benefited from his character design. His short, compact body and large expressive eyes were more adorable to the audience than Jar-Jar’s tall, large body and small eyes.
Everyone’s making a fuss over Wall-E and EVE. I’m the one who saved their metal butts.
Everyone’s making a fuss over Wall-E and EVE. I’m the one who saved their metal butts.Although Wall-E is more optimistic than most dystopia films, it a cautionary message set in a depressingly distant future. Yet, it still allows enough time for moviegoers to absorb the contrast of scale. EVE’s ship vs. Wall-E. The cockroach vs. the large skyscraper sized piles of garbage. The faint echo from the electronic ads popping up for a civilization long gone. These images don’t need dialogue, or editorializing, or filters. People are invited to observe the environment on their own terms, like pressing their noses on windows, taking in everything around them.
I knew I went overboard with the report, but the film had that much depth, and I had a lot to comment about. After proofreading and spell checking, I finally emailed it within 30 minutes of the deadline.
Sunset had come and gone and while I waited for my take out order to arrive at my apartment, my cell rang. Kate’s relieved voice couldn’t wait to thank me for the comprehensive report she and her daughter read. Wall-E was the first movie they enjoyed watching together. Kate also informed me that she had already mailed the remainder of my fee. She then wished me good night. It would’ve been had my roast beef with fries arrived much earlier and much warmer.
Anywho, the case of the improbable task is done. Thanks for checking in, everybody. See you next time. This is Devin V. Duncan, the D.V. Detective, logging off.