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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, April 16, 2010

Well-cast 'The Joneses' easy to keep up with


By Roger Moore
McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

David Duchovny and Demi Moore play actors planted in an affluent suburb to subtly market products.

Roadside Attractions

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'THE JONESES'

R, for language, some sexual content, teen drinking and drug use

90 minutes

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There's something about "The Joneses." Their two-parent, two-teenager nuclear-family perfection — complete with shiny teeth and sexy, toned bodies — would be intimidating, if they weren't so cool, so casual.

It's as if they're designed to fit in, to succeed, to become role models.

Are they Coneheads? Vampires from Forks?

Worse. They're marketers, cunning "plants" cast for their ability to earn envy and show off Lacoste or Yves Saint Laurent fashions, Audi sports cars, Ethan Allen furnishings and every manner of flatscreen TV, perfume or earring known to American capitalism.

Their "cell" sells, and looks darned attractive doing it.

"If people want you," their handler (Lauren Hutton) explains, "they'll want what you've got."

And soon, through the "ripple effect" of stealth-viral marketing, everybody in their new town is racing to keep up with "The Joneses."

Writer-director Derrick Borte's sly satire benefits from on-the-nose casting. Who wouldn't love looking like Demi Moore or David Duchovny, or, if you're in high school, Amber Heard?

They play the actors a super-secret marketing company plants in a gated community in an unnamed, affluent suburb.

Kate (Moore) is the boss, on task, getting those sales numbers up. No dinner party in their perfect mansion would be perfect without a plug for this beer or those heat-and-serve burritos or flash-frozen bites of sushi.

Duchovny is Steve, "Dad" to Mick (Ben Hollingsworth) and Jenn (Heard).

Steve is enthusiastic, but new to this business. He still has a conscience. He's a veteran salesman who's a little bothered by the way the locals lap up their subtle showcasing of products, especially their gullible neighbors (cosmetics cultist Glenne Headley and Gary Cole).

Jenn and Mick, working the high-school crowd, have even trickier ethics to ignore.

Borte's film sets us up for a fairly predictable payoff. For a satire that could have been a "scathing satire," this is a pretty low-wattage affair.

The actors are wonderful (Demi and Duchovny "keep this professional" and do their finest work in ages), but there's little edge, and the laughs are more chuckles as we watch one and all start copying the cool, trendy, new family in town.

Still, as cautionary tales about consumerism go, "The Joneses" manages a deft blend of the sexy, the sad and the silly. And Borte doles out his secrets and surprises in ways that make it easy to keep up with these Joneses.