Coming into a season brimming with prestige pictures, Oscar contenders, and Very Important Movies, it’s advisable to cleanse your palate with a film that doesn’t want to do anything more than simply entertain. And Christopher Guest‘s “Mascots,” which premieres at the Toronto International Film Festival will serve that function admirably and hilariously.
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Having once again rounded up a roster of tremendously talented and funny players —Jane Lynch, Parker Posey, Fred Willard, Ed Begley Jr., Christopher Moynihan, Don Lake, Brad Williams, Zach Woods, Chris O’Dowd, Matt Griesser, Susan Yeagley, Sarah Baker, Tom Bennett, Kerry Godliman, Bob Balaban, Jennifer Coolidge, Michael Hitchcock, Maria Blasucci, John Michael Higgins and Jim Piddock — Guest’s latest looks like it has a similar vibe to “Best In Show,” but this time, he’s taking audiences into the world of professional mascots. Here’s the synopsis from TIFF:
All the world’s a stage in the films of Christopher Guest, and all the players just want to be loved, to be accepted — and to win! Guest’s semi-improvised mockumentaries consistently champion the underdogs. (And, in the case of the magnificent Best in Show, actual dogs.) With this latest film, the director and his extended family of gifted collaborators usher us into the milieu of professional mascots, those energetic individuals who bravely don ridiculous oversized costumes to excite sports fans and cheer on their team with slapstick antics. Chronicling the competition for the World Mascot Association’s Gold Fluffy Award, Mascots is an inspired showcase for the comic genius of Guest and company.
Among the mascots who descend on Anaheim for the Golden Fluffies are a Midwestern man whose routine is based entirely around plumbing, a Texan whose moves are heavily informed by modern dance, and a womanizing Irish Canuck raised in a commune whose members follow the spiritual teachings of Michael Landon’s character on Highway to Heaven. And then there’s Gabby Monkhouse: mascot-turned-judge. The stakes are high, and the competitors must contend with mandatory drug testing, familial guilt trips, marital discord, and food poisoning. The WMA organizers, meanwhile, are desperate to impress a pair of representatives from the Gluten-Free Channel, who may just want to turn the Fluffies into a nationally televised event.
“Mascots” hits Netflix on October 13th.