Bob & Tom Ill Never Smoke Weed With Willy Again
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Dr. Leo Marvin, an egotistical psychotherapist in New York City, is looking frontward to his upcoming advent on a "Good Morning America" telecast, during which he plans to brag about "Baby Steps," his new book about emotional disorder theories in which he details his philosophy of treating patients and their phobias. Meanwhile, Bob Wiley is a recluse who is so agape to leave his own flat that he has to talk himself out the door. When he is pawned off on Leo by a psychotherapist colleague, he becomes fastened to him. Leo finds Bob extremely annoying. When Leo accompanies his wife, Faye, his daughter, Anna, and his son, Sigmund, to a peaceful New Hampshire lakeside cottage for a month-long holiday, he thinks he's been freed from Bob. Leo expects to mesmerize his family with his prowess as a vivid husband and remarkable father who knows all in that location is to know near instructing Faye and raising Anna and Sigmund. But Bob isn't going to let him relish a quiet summer by the lake. By cleverly tricking the telephone operator at Leo'southward exchange, Bob discovers the whereabouts of him and his family unit. Despite his phobia about traveling alone, Bob somehow manages to talk himself onto a bus, and he arrives in New Hampshire. Leo'southward holiday comes to a screeching halt the moment he sees him. With his witty personality, his ability to dispense people, and his good sense of humor, he quickly becomes an annoyance to Leo, only not to Faye, Anna, and Sigmund, because they think he is fun while Leo is dull. Fearing that he's losing his family to him, Leo frantically tries to observe a way to make him go back to New York Urban center, and information technology's non as easy as he had hoped. He finds himself stepping exterior the constabulary to endeavour to get Bob to stay away from Faye, Anna, and Sigmund--he slowly goes berserk, and makes plans to kill Bob. —Todd Baldridge
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8/ 10
a riot
Why don't they brand movies like this anymore as a norm? Today'southward comedy is so depression-brow and vulgar, in my opinion. "Date Night" was a film that seemed like a throwback. "What About Bob" was made in 1991, and it's super-funny.
Bill Murray plays a completely neurotic, dysfunctional personality who appears to have driven his offset psychiatrist out of the business. In the opening frames, nosotros run across the doc frantically packing as he calls psychiatrist Leo Marvin (Richard Dreyfuss), whose volume, Babe Steps, has just come out to excellent reviews. Leo's at the height of the world. He won't exist for long.
The former doc has passed on a patient, Bob Wiley (Bill Murray), to Dr. Marvin. Dr. Marvin patiently listens to Nib and all his many, many issues, finally stating that he can help Pecker, but he's going on holiday with his family and will see Bob upon his return. That's what he thinks.
Bob manages to observe out where the good doctor and his family are staying, at a lake, and, after several days of trying to board the bus to the location, manages to swallow his fears and get on. Dr. Marvin is shocked and a lilliputian disturbed to see him, especially because he's due to appear on Good Forenoon, America and has been practicing what he will say and doesn't want whatsoever problems.
Unfortunately, Bob is embraced past Leo's wife and children (Julie Hagerty, Charlie Korsmo, and Kathryn Erbe), who are nuts about him. Bob even manages to charm the crew of Expert Morn America and gets to be on the show with Dr. Marvin, who is thrilled - non. Dr. Marvin himself becomes increasingly dysfunctional as time goes on and Bob just won't go away.
Absolutely hilarious comedy, fabricated all the better past the fact that everyone plays it totally straight, non going for laughs. Unremarkably I am not a huge fan of Richard Dreyfuss, but he is perfectly cast as Leo Marvin. Bill Murray is wonderful as a likable, manipulative, obsessive-compulsive, dependent neurotic who only won't take 'no' for an answer.
Lots of laughs, including Murray's opening scene, Dreyfuss trying to convince himself that Bob can leave because the rain is "letting up" while it's a monsoon, and many other scenes. If y'all want to laugh, don't miss this.
- blanche-2
- Jan 15, 2013
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By what proper noun was What Virtually Bob? (1991) officially released in Bharat in Hindi?
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Source: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103241/
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