![]() ![]() We follow Arnold through morning sickness, cramps, visits to the ultrasound lab and natural childbirth classes, all given a spin by the need to keep his condition as secret as possible. The movie's plot is more or less preordained by the progress of a pregnancy. One of Thompson's gifts, which is precious here, is a way of cheerfully making the best of obviously catastrophic situations. Schwarzenegger is helped mightily by being flanked by three superb comic actors: DeVito, whose crazy enthusiasm makes the scheme almost halfway convincing Emma Thompson, as the scientist who takes over Schwarzenegger's old lab and makes an unexpected contribution to the experiment, and Pamela Reed, as DeVito's exwife, who is pregnant herself, possibly by a member of Aerosmith.ĭeVito and Thompson turn their scenes into a seminar for the study and exercise of the double take the way they react to developments is funnier than the developments themselves. This is probably the only way this story could have worked, but not every actor would have known that. He plays the role absolutely straight, trusting the material to make the points and get the laughs. ![]() He never wrings an emotion out of reluctant material. Observe his acting carefully in "Junior," and you'll see skills that many "serious" actors could only envy. I know this sounds odd, but Schwarzenegger is perfect for the role. The movie's comedy, and some other scenes that are sort of touching, all come out of the man's experience as he begins to feel motherly toward his unborn child. The movie wisely never even attempts to explain how this is possible in a person without a womb hard science is not the strong point here. The experiment is not only a success, but Schwarzenegger actually becomes pregnant. The two doctors borrow an egg, Arnold donates the sperm, they inject the result into his body, and Arnold starts taking daily doses of their miracle drug. It's a good thing Arbogast is a persuasive talker DeVito plays him with a conspiratorial charm, talking about the "beauty of the plan" as if it's something anyone would be lucky to participate in. This is a dubious procedure, because Arnold must first be implanted with a fertilized human egg - unusual for a woman, unheard of for a man. But Arbogast is convinced they're on the trail of a fertility drug that will make millions, and in a last-ditch effort, he persuades Hesse to experiment by trying the drug on himself. Even his partner, a fellow researcher named Arbogast ( Danny DeVito), doesn't like him ("You have all the warmth and charm of a wall-eyed pike"). As an actor with big muscles and a balky Austrian accent, you'd think he would be limited, and yet he knows himself so well that it gives him freedom: Is a pregnant Arnold any harder to believe, really, than Arnold as Conan the Barbarian? He begins in "Junior" as a scientist named Hesse, with no charm and no personality, an automaton whose only reaction, when his research funding is yanked, is to pack his bags and head back to Europe. He has an uncanny idea of what will and won't work, and since you walk in expecting almost nothing to work, the result is a sort of deliverance. The wonder is not that Arnold Schwarzenegger plays a pregnant person in "Junior," but that he plays one so well. ![]()
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