I must confess that it took some time for me to recognize the considerable talent of John Cena. Around the time when he appeared in “12 Rounds” (2009), he looked to me like just another popular American professional wrestler trying to follow the footsteps of, say, Dwayne Johnson, but he gradually demonstrated his distinctive talent in a number of different works such as “Trainwreck” (2015) and “The Suicide Squad” (2021) during next several years. As recently shown from his wryly hilarious guest appearance in Apple TV+ series “Pluribus”, he is smart enough to know exactly what and how he can act, and that will certainly help his ongoing career more.
As far as I observed from his performances, Cena is usually effective as a straight counterpart to silly or absurd comic situation (I would love to see him doing deadpan comedy for Wes Anderson someday), and that valuable talent of his is effectively utilized in Netflix comedy film “Little Brother”, which was released in last week. While showing good comic timing along with his fellow main cast members, he also keeps his acting as straight as possible, and this actually makes a number of loony moments in the film all the more amusing for us.
Here in this film, Cena plays Rudd Landy (John Cena), who is a fairly successful real estate businessman in New York City but still wants to distinguish him a lot more due to his longtime inferiority complex associated with his older brother Josh (Christopher Meloni). Since their early years, Josh has always looked cooler and more successful compared to his younger brother, and Rudd feels like being overshadowed again by Josh when Josh, who is incidentally a very wealthy hedge fund manager, contributed much more money than Rudd to a charity event held by Rudd’s wife Deirdre (Michelle Monaghan).
Anyway, Rudd has been recently trying to go for more prominence and success via some big reality TV show, but the situation does not look that rosy for him from the very beginning. To the producers of the reality TV show, he is just another candidate to come and then go, and that certainly makes him all the more insecure and neurotic than before, while also making him a lot more distant to his wife and their two adolescent sons.
And then there comes an unexpected change on one day. Rudd and his wife happen to be brought in front of a guy named Marcus Pinchel (Eric André), and Rudd does not recognize Marcus at first before eventually remembering an old connection between him and Marcus. More than 25 years ago, young Rudd got himself associated with young Marcus via a “Big Brother-Little Brother program”, and this brief relationship between them has meant a lot to Marcus even though Rudd never contacted him since then.
It soon turns out that Marcus’s longtime assistant Mia (Sherry Cola) has corresponded with Marcus for a while via Rudd’s email account without Rudd’s knowledge. Believing that Rudd still cares a lot about him, Marcus decided to go to see Rudd in New York City, so he got out from a mental hospital where he had temporarily stayed for no particular reason.
Needless to say, Rudd’s daily life and schedule are immediately disrupted in one way or another thanks to Marcus, who is your average messy troublemaker. As his “brother” keeps causing more troubles, Rudd becomes more exasperated and frustrated, but he is also quite perplexed as Marcus is somehow accepted well by not only his family and assistant but also the producers of the reality show, who instantly sense considerable potential from Marcus right from the start.
As Cena steadily holds the ground with the growing exasperation inside his character, the movie diligently throws one wacky comic moment after another, and Eric André willingly throws himself into sheer silliness and absurdities without any sense of condescension. While his goofy appearance makes a good contrast with his co-star’s straightforward attitude, André somehow strikes the right balance between sincerity and zaniness, and he also did a good job of imbuing his character with some little but precious pathos. Yes, we can clearly see how much his character annoys Rudd with his irrepressible goofiness, but we also perceive Marcus’s sincere and amiable aspects just like Rudd’s wife, who gladly shows more heart to him and then receives some valuable lesson to spice up her marriage a bit.
While it becomes pretty predictable and less fun during its last act, the movie keeps holding our attention thanks to its two co-stars’ good efforts, and they are also supported well by several main cast members, who have each own comic moment to shine along the story. While Michelle Monaghan, who has been one of the most underrated actresses working in Hollywood at present, surprises us as not flinching at all from some of the raunchiest moments in the film, Christopher Meloni somehow brings some interesting human details to his supposedly broad supporting character, and the special mention goes to Sherry Cola, who ably overcomes her rather thankless supporting part.
In conclusion, “Little Brother” does not surpass my expectation, but it handles its comic materials a bit better than expected, so I give it mild recommendation. Yes, it is sometimes too silly for my taste, but I did chuckle more than once during my viewing, and now I must remind myself again of what my late mentor Roger Ebert often quoted: “A man goes to the movies. A critic must be honest enough to admit that he is that man.”













































