The Pink Panther with Steve Martin: UMD for Sony PSP Cover

    The Pink Panther Director: Shawn Levy Cast: Steve Martin, Kevin Kline, Jean Reno, Emily Mortimer

    UMD for Sony PSP - Wide Screen Learn more

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    • UMD for Sony PSP Release Date: 06/13/2006
    • Rating: Rated PG
    • Sales Rank: 41,048

    Viewer Rating: (15 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Unforgettable" See All

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    Full-length movie; Widescreen presentation; DVD picture quality

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    Editorial Reviews

    The superstar coach of France's World Cup soccer team is murdered before a stadium full of celebrating fans. The fabulous Pink Panther diamond on his finger has been stolen. Who ya gonna call? Enter, stumbling, Jacques Clouseau, the inspector without a clue. The notion of reviving Blake Edwards's mostly classic Pink Panther comedies, with Steve Martin stepping in for Peter Sellers, raised eyebrows when it was first announced. And an initial delay in its theatrical release from fall 2005 to spring 2006 had critics whispering that the film might be a bomb. It's certainly not; in fact, Martin arguably hasn't been this flat-out funny in a movie since Bowfinger. His Clouseau may not be as intimately observed as Sellers', but his French accent is just as outrageous and he is as hilariously hapless and hopelessly inept, able to wreak inspired mayhem simply by retrieving an errant Viagra pill from a hotel bathroom toilet or downloading a ringtone from his computer (plunging all of Paris into darkness in the process). Martin benefits from the inspired supporting cast, including Kevin Kline as Chief Inspector Dreyfus, who hires Clouseau, certain he will fail, in a bid to earn himself the Medal of Honor (for which he has been nominated seven times). Jean Reno is at his formidable, deadpan best as Ponton, whom Dreyfus assigns as Clouseau's assistant. A running gag, borrowed from the earlier films, finds Ponton anticipating all of Clouseau's attempts to catch him off guard. Beyoncé had more to do in Goldmember, but she makes a fetching suspect. "It could be a trap," Ponton warns when she invites Clouseau to dinner. "Who cares?" he replies. Clive Owen also has an amusing, apropos-of-nothing cameo as Agent 006. Martin co-wrote the screenplay, and his clever wordplay is in evidence throughout. As with the original films, the animated opening credits and Henry Mancini's jazzy, jaunty theme perfectly set the stage for the sophisticated slapstick to come. The Pink Panther is not flawless, but as a vehicle for Martin, it's a comic gem. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble

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    Customer Reviews

    GREATby Anonymous

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    March 02, 2009: Only Steve Martin could take the place of Peter Sellers. I loved it and am looking forward to the next movie.

    This review was written about the DVD Special Edition / Wide Screen edition.

    Steve Martin has fun with The Pink Panther but there will always only be one Inspector Clouseau - Peby n2laughs

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    February 12, 2009: Steve Martin's The Pink Panther is a funny and enjoyable film if one sees it as a spoof on the original Pink Panther rather than a re-make. Peter Sellers WAS Inspector Clouseau. He so throughly made the part his own that no one will ever be able to take it away.

    Steve Martin doesn't even really seem to try! What Martin does is what he does best. He brings his own slapstick brand of comedy to the part and one has a sense that he is simply having fun PRETENDING to be the Inspector rather than actually BEING the Inspector.

    Some of the sight gags are good but it is Martin's ability to wring halarity out of the mundane that makes this film worth watching. Look for the scene where the Inspector is taking English lessons from an instructor so that he will blend in when he travels to the United States. Martin is able to effortlessly turn a simple, boring English lesson into something so halarious that the movie is worth seeing just for that scene. One can watch the scene over and over and never tire from the outrageousness of Martin's performance.

    Martin's The Pink Panther is not his best film and it doesn't come close to the genius of Peter Seller's version but it is funny - halarious at times - and well worth the re-visit to one of films all time favorite characters.

    This review was written about the DVD Special Edition / Wide Screen edition.


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