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Paul: movie review

In this comedy adventure, two sci-fi geeks go on a road trip in Nevada where they accidentally meet a foul-mouthed alien named Paul.

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Mario Anzuoni/Reuters
Writers and cast members Nick Frost (l.) and Simon Pegg pose at the premiere of 'Paul' at the Grauman's Chinese theater in Hollywood, Calif. on March 14. The movie opens in the US on March 18.

The amusing conceit behind 鈥Paul鈥 is that an E.T. can be every bit as foul-mouthed and goony as any slacker. This is not quite enough of a conceit to sustain a full-length movie 鈥 鈥淧aul鈥 would have made a terrific short film 鈥 but there are incidental pleasures all along the way.

Nick Frost and Simon Pegg, who also double as screenwriters, play geeky British tourists who rent an RV and scout out UFO landmarks in Nevada. Soon they are joined by an escapee from a top-secret military base, Paul, a scrawny alien who, after 60 years on Earth, just wants to get back to his own planet. Hot on their trail are federal agents (Bill Hader, Jason Bateman, and Joe Lo Truglio) of varying degrees of cluelessness.

I鈥檓 not sure that having a rabid ex-evangelical firebrand (Kristin Wiig) join the fray was such a masterstroke 鈥 it brings the movie into evolution/creationism terrain that is too scabrous for its own good. But Frost and Pegg, who had a breakout hit with 鈥Shaun of the Dead,鈥 are a wiggy team, and director Gregg Mottola (鈥Superbad,鈥 鈥Adventureland鈥) has a genial touch. The movie, despite what you may have gathered from the goofy trailer, is more sweet than silly. Grade: B (Rated R for language including sexual references, and some drug use.)

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