Now here's a film that goes down like a churro dunked in chocolate sauce. And like that alluring sugar-coated doughy Spanish treat, Game Night is a film with zero nutritional benefits but so easy to consume.
No subtexts, no heavy messages, it keeps its mood light and its subject matter dark — it's a cheerful black comedy, if you will.
The film centres around a married couple, Max and Annie, whose weekly game nights provide a release for their unbridled competitiveness. Their failure to conceive a much wanted child provides the nexus around which the film explores their relationship.
Max's sperm mobility is lacking, which only adds to the inferiority complex he has in relation to his brother, Brooks. Played by Kyle Chandler (Argo, Manchester by the Sea), Brooks is a highly successful entrepreneur, a winning risk-taker, and is everything Max isn't. When Brooks invites Max's friends over, offering "a game night to remember", the film shifts gear and begins to take great delight in blurring the lines between what is "the game" and what is real.
Max is played by the affable Jason Bateman (Office Christmas Party). I've always considered Bateman to be a male Jennifer Anniston, average, likeable, and very much the "everyman".