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Walk of Shame

Walk of Shame

  • Status: Released
  • 02-05-2014
  • Runtime: 95 min
  • Score: 5.963
  • Vote count: 1459

A reporter's dream of becoming a news anchor is compromised after a one-night stand leaves her stranded in downtown L.A. without a phone, car, ID or money - and only 8 hours to make it to the most important job interview of her life.

Elizabeth Banks

Meghan

James Marsden

Gordon

Gillian Jacobs

Rose

Sarah Wright

Denise

Ethan Suplee

Officer Dave

Bill Burr

Officer Walter

Ken Davitian

Cab Driver

Lawrence Gilliard Jr.

Scrilla

Alphonso McAuley

Pookie

Da'Vone McDonald

Hulk

Eric Etebari

Biker Boy

Oliver Hudson

Kyle

Jacob Timothy Manown

Kid with Bike

Carol Mansell

Charon

Bryan Callen

Dealer

Tig Notaro

Impound Woman

Willie Garson

Dan Karlin

Erin Segal

Gwen

Chris Conner

Tommy

Liz Carey

Jordan

Brandon Scott

Josh

Ian Roberts

Main Network Executive

Kevin Nealon

Chopper Steve

Dan Callahan

Young Producer

Jerry Minor

Lt. Drier

Niecy Nash-Betts

Bus Driver

Eve Brenner

Old Lady

P.J. Byrne

Moshe

Jordan Levenson

Elder

Tonja Kahlens

Ginger the Hooker

John Farley

John

Richard Cabral

Gang Member

Geoffrey Rivas

Store Owner

Cindera Che

Madame

Carolina Monte Rosa

Kyle's Girlfriend

Sam Upton

Cop

Vic Chao

Shift Captain

Jacob Irving Cherry

Male Intern

Mason Pryor

Lookout Kid

Anna Halprin

Granny Bandit

Rebecca Brunk

Meghan's Mom

Kate Mulligan

Stage Manager

China Morbosa

Bartender

Ann Marie Strucke

Waitress

Donnie Smith

Biker Boy Crew #1

Amie Dellavalle

Station Employee

David Bortolucci

Duke

Nilla Elizabeth Watkins

Hooker

Amanda Young

Julie

David Winston Barge

Chuck Rogers

Gillian Vigman

Female Blooper Anchor #1

Justin Smith

Male Blooper Anchor #1

Ann Reilly

Female Blooper Anchor #2

Cooper Thornton

Male Blooper Anchor #2

Anna Bocci

Female Blooper Anchor #3

Jay Montepare

Male Blooper Anchor #3

Emily Wagner

Female Blooper Anchor #1

Elizabeth Chomko

Female Blooper Anchor #5

Rocky Russo

Male Blooper Reporter #1

Keeshan Giles

Male Blooper Reporter #2

Andrew Friedman

Male Blooper Reporter #3

Steven Brill

Male Blooper Lawyer

Jesse Erwin

Prankster

Nick Barghini

Kissing Couple (uncredited)

Mark Cirillo

Charlie (uncredited)

Stuart Evan Davis

Solitary Jogger (uncredited)

Gary Sievers

Hasidic Jew (uncredited)

Craig Taylor

Drug Lord (uncredited)

Maggie Wagner

News Station Executive (uncredited)

Michelle Winters

Kissing Couple (uncredited)

Alex Wen

Director Steven Brill’s last film was my least favorite movie of 2013 (Movie 43), so expectations were not exactly sky high for Walk of Shame. At first glance, the comedy starring Elizabeth Banks appears to be a mix between The Hangover and Anchorman. Unfortunately, it lacks the jokes or the charm that the former two films had. After having her boyfriend leave and thinking she lost a once-in-a-lifetime job opportunity as an anchor in a major station, Meghan reacts as any young adult would, by getting sloppy drunk and engaging in a one night stand. After a successful night, she wakes to find out that she’s now the top candidate for the anchor job, she just needs to get to work on time. Forgetting her wallet and phone, Meghan proceeds to embark on the longest walk of shame ever.. On the way, she makes unlikely friends and goes through zany adventures to make it to the newsroom in time for evening news. That was the intention. Instead, Walk of Shame is a misogynistic, racist, unfunny escapade that fails to bring anything new to the comedy genre. The issue with the film is that the derivation of humor stems from how different Meghan is from everyone else. Early on, Meghan encounters three black men, and sure enough she’s scared that they’re drug dealers evading the cops. Not only is her character racist, Brill’s perspective encourages the audience to be racist. It turns out that these guys, Scrilla, Pookie, and Hulk, are nice gentlemen that’s willing to help Meghan. This is suppose to be funny. The contrast from the expectation of how these gangbangers would act towards an attractive white woman and how the it plays out in the movie is suppose to be hilarious. These presumptions just come off senselessly offensive. It’s not an isolated incident either. Meghan encounters an angry foreign taxi driver, a bunch of incompetent cops, and most damaging, the film paints Elizabeth Banks’ character as a bumbling idiot. Foreigners can’t be trusted, minorities are stereotypes and women are useless, Walk of Shame is an embarrassing concept built on damaging assumptions. Poor writing, unoriginal jokes and predictable characters are just icing on the cake for this crude attempt at humor. Steven Brill will have the audience leaving the theaters in a walk of shame with this one. Read more reviews at artisticritique.com

Kamurai

Decent watch, probably won't watch again, and can't recommend. It's not that it's a bad movie: I'm not a big Elizabeth Banks fan, and you get a lot of her, like 90% of the movie is just her being abused by the world, with very little triumph along the way. The rest of the movie is basically everyone else in the world forcing, manipulating, and validating her, and it would have been a better experience if she was a stronger character. I get (and it's very obvious, very early) that the point is that she's a weak character that is forced to grow through the adversity of this adventure. I just would have rather seen someone stronger (think American Lara Croft for a moment) run a similar formula of problem, attempt resolution, extraordinary circumstance, new problem, etc. Hell make it a parkour movie where a free runner had a blackout night, basically "The Hangover" meets "Mirror's Edge" (video game). My point is, that when you see something and want something else, you don't like what you have in front of you, even if it's a decent (but different) movie that you were expecting. It an awful part of being human. While the humor is decent, the repetitive formula creates fulfilled expectation, which dulls the comedy. It's also not very uplifting. I think it's fair to say that Elizabeth Banks is statistically attractive, in a cute dress, and is playing a character who is a local celebrity. I've also been informed being a white woman is advantageous. She's basically an ideal candidate to get charity help, except from people that are just as likely to kill her, but it pushes my suspension of disbelief that she isn't able to get people to talk to her, let alone actually help her. I'm just realizing that, having been stranded before, on multiple occasions, I may be being a little harsh, but it just doesn't make it as enjoyable for me.

Kamurai

Test for https://www.themoviedb.org/talk/5f0e8dcbd9554b0035b11b82?page=1#5f0fc7de20e6a500339f7b7e Please delete or disapprove this review as it was only to retest a bug.