Archive material shows Chase’s abilities but the times have changed around the self-aggrandising actor and comedian – and not to his benefit
Feature films and documentaries can sometimes struggle to fasten down viewers’ attention if the central character isn’t sympathetic but maybe we’re a tad more forgiving of anti-heroes in nonfiction as we accept warts and all in real life. But this film about actor and comic Chevy Chase faces an uphill battle given that not only does it report on what an “asshole” – to quote the epithet most often applied to him – he has been in the past, we also witness some assholery first-hand. In the opening minutes, we see him telling the film’s director Marina Zenovich that he’s smarter than her, while he also interrupts her, rolls his eyes at her questions and generally acts the dork.
This is partly the infamous “teasing” Chase has always copped to, of a piece with his comically arrogant comic style which the film’s title encapsulates. (It used to be his catchphrase when he anchored the Weekend Update segment on US sketch show Saturday Night Live.) That self-aggrandisement went hand in hand with the denigration of everyone around him, which ended up turning Chase into the most obnoxious kind of coked-up insult-comic by the 1990s.
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