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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Review: Lively Carrey makes ‘Morris’ a keeper

Roger Moore Orlando Sentinel

Despite its title, it has nothing to do with cigarettes. But its star, as he once famously said on screen, is absolutely “smokin’.”

Jim Carrey is the narrator, heart and soul of “I Love You Phillip Morris,” transforming what could have been a cliched con man comedy, generic Jim Carrey-character comedy or run-of-the-mill gay coming-out comedy into something smarter, sweeter and downright giddy.

Carrey plays Steven Russell, a one-time cop, married man and father who lives a secret double life until that day when a bad car wreck sends him over the edge.

“I’m gay,” he babbles on the EMT’s gurney. “Gay gay gay gay gay gay gay.”

Out of the closet, Steven gleefully cruises Miami. The con man in him comes to the fore when he makes one unpleasant discovery about his new, free-wheeling lifestyle.

“Bein’ gay is expensive,” he drawls.

Steven weasels his way into work in Texas, where his gift for living a lie – many lies – makes him a grand con man.

But it’s when he gets caught and sent to prison that he truly thrives, and not just because of the opportunity for a glad-handing con man like him to ingratiate himself into “the system” or the many same-sex romantic options.

It’s in stir that Steven meets his dreamboat, Phillip Morris, played with a drawling delicacy by Ewan McGregor.

The bulk of this “really happened, it really did” story concerns Steven’s efforts to be close to Phillip, to (once they’re out of jail) provide an opulent life for him and to stay one step ahead of those who might find him out in his various hustled jobs: lawyer, accountant, etc.

Co-writers and co-directors John Requa and Glen Ficarra conjure up an offbeat “How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying”-meets-“Dog Day Afternoon” gay romance that has us rooting for Steven and Phillip from the moment they meet.

And when things turn dark – as they often do when your whole life is a lie – we fear for them, especially Steven, whose genius for hustling folks is matched with greed, all channeled into his mania for Phillip.

It’s a tribute to McGregor that his trademark sparkle makes us believe, every minute of this film, that a nut like Carrey’s Steven would fall for him and go to the ends of the Earth – or prison in Texas – to earn and keep his love.

And it is Carrey, turning his patented rubber-faced, rubber-voiced shtick loose on a role with heart, substance and entertainment value, who makes this long-delayed romantic farce a movie too good to sit on any studio’s shelf.