While writer/director/star Mel Brooks achieved his greatest career successes in the world of genre spoofs, he initially made his mark with original ideas and adaptations, including "The Producers" and "The Twelve Chairs." With efforts such as "Blazing Saddles" and "Young Frankenstein" cementing his name as the go-to guy for cinematic replication with a side of silliness, Brooks returned to his first love with 1991's "Life Stinks," his first new idea after two decades of box office successes. Perhaps the vacation should've lasted longer. Although designed with Brooks's usual manic spirit and timing, "Life Stinks" is a feature that just doesn't work, no matter how hard it emphasizes punchlines or slaps around actors. It's an unpleasant, unfunny comedy that attempts to make light of the dire subject of homelessness, with Brooks somehow believing that gags concerning alcoholism and mental illness are enough to generate a level of social awareness that could justify the wince-inducing screenplay. Brooks has made his share of stinkers, but this picture is his worst, dragged to a full stop by uncharacteristic lifelessness. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com
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