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Extract

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 33 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 28 votes
Read user comments
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Movie Info
Genre(s): Comedy
Written by: Mike Judge
Directed by: Mike Judge
Release Date:
Theatrical: September 4, 2009
Running Time: 91 minutes, Color
Origin: USA
Summary
RATING: R for language, sexual references and some drug use
Starring Jason Bateman, Kristen Wiig, Ben Affleck, Mila Kunis, J.K. Simmons, David Koechner, Clifton Collins Jr., and T.J. Miller
Joel is one step away from selling his flavor extract factory and retiring to easy street when a freak workplace accident sets in motion a series of disasters that put his business and personal life in jeopardy. (Miramax)
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database Official Studio Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
Nobody is better at capturing the crushing banality of everyday life than Judge.
Read Full Review >Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
The kind of smart, openhearted comedy that doesn't come along every day.
Read Full Review >Slate Dana Stevens
Extract seems destined to do minor business at the box office but achieve a kind of immortality as a cult DVD, to be quoted from at parties and passed around to friends. Which may be just fine by its creator--as Beavis and Butt-head have taught us, snickering with your friends in front of the television can is one of life's great joys.
Read Full Review >New York Post Kyle Smith
White trash meets white collar in Extract, Mike Judge's workplace comedy -- which contains more reality than the last five documentaries I've seen.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Amy Biancolli
Isn't an instant classic, but it bumps along agreeably.
Read Full Review >Baltimore Sun Michael Sragow
Extract is an exuberant original...like no other and one of the best comedies of the year.
Read Full Review >Christian Science Monitor Andy Klein
Judge still comes up with enough laughs to deserve our attention. He is helped more than a little by hilarious work from supporting players Kristen Wiig, David Koechner, J.K. Simmons, and Dustin Milligan.
Read Full Review >Rolling Stone Peter Travers
Judge is in the business of social satire, and his laughs can sting, but his movie is a comic salute to free enterprise. And, boy, do we need it now.
Read Full Review >USA Today Claudia Puig
Affleck ought to do more quirky character roles rather than leading-man parts in action films. Bateman plays his low-key straight man/protagonist to perfection.
Read Full Review >Portland Oregonian Stan Hall
Which leads to the question of whether Extract, clunky title aside, will finally give Judge a box-office hit. It looks and quacks like "Office Space," and previous satirical edges have been sanded down to something palatable to average filmgoers. On the other hand, it largely lacks the audacious elements that have given stuff like "The Hangover" an intense word-of-mouth following.
Read Full Review >Village Voice J. Hoberman
The movie is characterized by its crisp, cutting, classical framing, and comic timing. The style and approach recall classic Albert Brooks. Indeed, the beleaguered, cuckolded Joel would have been a great role for the young Brooks--adding a certain self-aggrandizing je ne sais quoi or a neurotic zetz that the appealing, but bland, Bateman lacks.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
From "Beavis and Butt-Head" to "King of the Hill" to "Office Space," Mike Judge has become our most dogged examiner of middle-American foolishness; no other comedy filmmaker more skillfully exploits that nagging sense that you’re surrounded by idiots.
Read Full Review >Austin Chronicle Marjorie Baumgarten
It’s a vivid indictment of the way in which we all stumble along, yet the film never musters full-throated chagrin at our dull complacency.
Read Full Review >New Orleans Times-Picayune Mike Scott
With its immensely likable cast elevating the material, Judge extracts just enough ironic chuckles to rescue the movie from being written off as an assembly-line comedy.
Read Full Review >ReelViews James Berardinelli
Extract is no masterpiece, but it's considerably better than many 2009 films that have received a more robust backing.
Read Full Review >St. Louis Post-Dispatch Joe Williams
Extract has some flavor, but the comedic kick is diluted by flat characters and a thin story.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
Sort of entertaining, but lacks the focus and comic energy of Judge's "Office Space" (1999), and to believe that Suzie would be attracted to the gigolo requires not merely the suspension of disbelief, but its demolition.
Read Full Review >Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez
Although never boring and almost continually amusing, Extract doesn't work as a movie because you don't buy a minute of it, even as silly satire.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea
A mix of coolheaded cultural satire and anxiety-inducing workplace and marital shenanigans, Extract is an odd project. It's smarter than most of the comedies out there right now, but that doesn't necessarily make it funnier.
Read Full Review >Dallas Observer Robert Wilonsky
The jokes in Extract play almost like afterthoughts, the last-second add-ons of a former animator who, until now, has always treated his flesh-and-blood characters a bit like cartoon caricatures and vice versa.
Read Full Review >Time Out New York Joshua Rothkopf
Extract, for all its surface reminders of Judge’s 1999 cult hit, "Office Space" (it’s set around a suburban bottling plant), shows its maker taking the smallest step toward lesser comic matters of infidelity and bong abuse. It feels slightly beneath him. That’s not to say you should skip it.
Read Full Review >New York Daily News Elizabeth Weitzman
The entire cast, in fact, seems to be having fun, with Affleck and Koechner cheerfully stealing each one of their scenes. And the jokes come often enough to leave us consistently amused and occasionally delighted.
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
Couldn't Mike Judge, with his acid wit, have come up with a better title for a suburban-schlub comedy than Extract?
Read Full Review >Boston Globe Wesley Morris
All we have here are bits, so many, in fact, that Extract’ feels more like a collection of crumbs.
Read Full Review >The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Liam Lacey
A larger discomfort with Extract is an ambivalent attitude about comedy and social class. Mocking an officious middle-manager is always fair game; ridiculing blue-collar workers who resent their mindless jobs just feels mean.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles Times Betsy Sharkey
While Extract is mildly amusing and a slice of a mostly working-class world that doesn't make it into comedy that much anymore, it's not completely convincing as a movie.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Rick Kisonak
Easily the most disappointing movie of the summer, Extract is more significantly the biggest letdown of its esteemed creator’s career.
Read Full Review >The New York Times Manohla Dargis
What’s most striking about Extract, beyond the scarcity of jokes and absence of actual filmmaking, is its deep well of sourness, which at times borders on misanthropy.
Read Full Review >Wall Street Journal Joanne Kaufman
Mr. Judge has done better...Here, by contrast, we're dealing with one-note characters, among them a sexy grifter (Mila Kunis) and a dim-witted gigolo (Dustin Milligan); situations that stretch all credibility; and jokes that are never more than sort of funny.
Read Full Review >The Hollywood Reporter Kirk Honeycutt
Not a single person in this ensemble comedy doesn't suffer from colossal stupidity.
Read Full Review >Variety Justin Chang
The picture's attempts at comic portraiture feel sketchy at best, more or less assigning each character a single, belabored trait.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Dan Zak
May be the most disappointing American comedy of the decade, partly because it's jokeless and joyless but mostly because it squanders an all-star cast of superb comic talent.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 4.5 (out of 10) based on 28 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Stuart L gave it a1:
No script, no acting, no point.
J T gave it a3:
This movie is not funny... even on the rare occasions that the jokes work.
Flitrcroft G gave it a3:
Unfortunately unfunny. I expected so much more, even after reading the mixed reviews here.
Marshall T gave it a4:
D+ Wow! A rare "thumbs down" review (I can usually muster at least a "Meh!")! I'm horrified to see that the Russian judges {to extract a tired 80's meme much as the film under review} I can usually count on for sober stiffly-curved grades in EW's Critical Mass--a/k/a Dana Stevens & Stephanie Zacharek--have *both* given this POS film a-minus grades!! AYFKM!! WTF!! (sorry meta-moderator: ayfkm!! wtf!!) Ten reasons I respectfully disagree: (10) Really? Every character in the movie is a caricature. And while I liked me my Beavis & Butt-Head (huh-huh rules) for its then-revelatory reductionist critique of the then-dying music video industry, this movie really doesn't much expand on such caricatures (and is not even half as funny) (huh-huh it sucks, huh-huh yeah yeah sucks Sucks SUCKS!) (9) Really? Every aspect of this Extract is manufactured as a lather-rinse-repeat monotone without any sense of irony or spiritual grace, culminating in an acquiescent debate about how many cars to drive *spoiler alert?* from the funeral. (8) Really? I swear that the cuts and scenes with dialogue involving Mila Kunis view much like a film student's audition tape for another film student's end-of-semester film project. (7) Really? If it's lust for pool boys (& others) with candy necklaces that you want, go with "Gods and Monsters". (6) Really? Speaking of God's Cock: rock band dude caricature (oh wait, I've already whined about the caricatures, and it's all well-packaged in the review in "Variety"). (5) Really? What the bleep did this film have to say about women and blue collar workers and all of us really? I'm down with edgy humor yet a lot of this was not edgy and simply was not funny and seemed misanthropic. Really?!? (4) Really? Although Gene Simmons surpasses his Ugly Betty entry, he's saddled with more borrowed (ball-slamming) material (. . . or is it really just homage to "Weeds"?--see '(1)' below and you decide!). (3) Really? In case you haven't figured it out, yes, I'm borrowing from a SNL motif (Really.) because the Annoying Neighbor motif in Extract reminded me (Really.) of the proverbial too-long SNL bit (MacGruber anyone? Really?). Yes, annoy me, make me squirm (brilliant!), but you can't claim authenticity after the umpteenth time. Really. (2) Really? If you *really* want to watch an entertaining riff on sordid lives, then you should actually watch "Sordid Lives" . . . simply transplanting Beth Grant and *repetition alert* having her represent for xenophobia as a one-note clucking, gossiping hen is tedious. Hector did it, Hector did it, Hector did it. All work and no thieving makes Hector a dull boy. (1) Really? Unless the goal of the movie is to get trashed (oh f**k, I finally figured it out . . . maybe this *is* a trojan horse that masquerades as a feature release . . . "Extract" is actually a drinking game packaged inside of a movie . . . and the title gives the necessary clue: drink every time you hear the word Dinkus (or see David Koechner's nosy neighbor approach or hear him say "the thing is"). And Matt Schulze's character's bong hit insistence provides the necessary reinforcement for this conspiracy theory. OK, with that revelation bouncin' around my noggin', I guess I'll have to award a postmodern bonus point (and hey Affleck+Wiig were appropriately ambivalent) . . . and so I'll actually rate the movie a 4: C- - -. Huh-huh. Umm . . . . yeah.
K K. gave it a1:
Best laugh and only laugh was the neighbor's death scene.
Richard W. gave it a3:
A major disappointment. A comedy with few laughs? A social commentary without commentary. An embarrassment to all except J.K. Simmons whose constant sense of bemusement may be the best review of this painful film.
joshington gave it a0:
Maybe one of the dumbest movies ever made. I hated it.
