Advanced Search >
Help Me Search

DVD

Upcoming Release Calendar
Film Awards & Top 10s By Year
All-Time High Scores
All-Time Low Scores
Best / Worst of the Decade

Recent DVD/Video Releases

sort by namesort by score

68 $9.99
49 2012
56 Adam
37 Amelia
35 Babysitters, The
86 Beaches of Agnes, The
19 Bitch Slap
65 Black Dynamite
71 Bliss
24 Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day, The
47 Box, The
57 Boys Are Back, The
51 Breakfast with Scot
81 Bright Star
71 Bronson
61 Capitalism: A Love Story
57 Chelsea on the Rocks
43 Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant
65 Coco Before Chanel
69 Cold Souls
23 Couples Retreat
75 Crude
81 Damned United, The
54 Dare
61 Dead Snow
68 End of the Line, The
55 Endgame
47 Everybody's Fine
64 Examined Life
xx Falling for Grace
31 Fix
74 Flame & Citron
xx From Mexico with Love
28 Gentlemen Broncos
64 Gigante
50 Give Me Your Hand
72 Good Hair
73 House of the Devil, The
82 Hunger
17 I Hate Valentine's Day
26 I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell
66 Informant!, The
34 Law Abiding Citizen
41 Little Ashes
33 Love Happens
67 Michael Jackson's This Is It
59 More Than a Game
34 Motherhood
49 New York, I Love You
19 Old Dogs
47 Ong Bak 2: The Beginning
68 Paris
44 Peter and Vandy
39 Planet 51
54 Pontypool
86 Ponyo
79 Precious: Based on the Novel by Sapphire
49 Private Lives of Pippa Lee, The
84 Revanche
30 Saw VI
69 September Issue, The
79 Serious Man, A
36 Serious Moonlight
70 Shall We Kiss?
24 Sorority Row
76 Soul Power
40 Spiral
41 Splinterheads
39 St. Trinian's
33 Stepfather, The
50 Stoning of Soraya M., The
45 Surrogates
47 Time Traveler's Wife
65 Vicious Kind, The
69 We Live in Public
65 Wedding Song, The
71 Where the Wild Things Are
67 Whip It
43 Women in Trouble
73 Zombieland

Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.

Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard, The

EMAILPRINTParamount Vantage

Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard, The reviews
39
5.9 User Score:

Generally unfavorable reviews

Based on 23 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?

Based on 26 votes
Read user comments
Rate this movie >

Movie Info

Genre(s): Comedy

Written by: Adam Stock
Rick Stempson

Directed by: Neal Brennan

Release Date:
Theatrical: August 14, 2009
DVD: December 15, 2009

Running Time: minutes, Color

Origin: USA

Summary

RATING: R for sexual content, nudity, pervasive language and some drug material

Starring Jeremy Piven, Ving Rhames, James Brolin, David Koechner, Kathryn Hahn, and Jordana Spiro

Who is Don Ready? Salesman? Lover? Song Stylist? Semi-professional dolphin trainer? Ready is all of the above, except for a dolphin trainer. When he’s asked to help save an ailing local car dealership from bankruptcy, Ready and his ragtag crew descend on the town of Temecula like a pack of coyotes on a basket full of burgers. Selling, drinking, selling and going to strip clubs is their stock and trade. And they do it well. What Don doesn’t expect is to fall in love and find his soul (cue heartfelt piano). (Paramount Vantage)

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

75

Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

A cheerfully energetically and very vulgar comedy.

Read Full Review >
70

Los Angeles Times Robert Abele

The Goods motors along choking out enough lowbrow laughs to make for an agreeably nutty late summer ride.

Read Full Review >
67

Portland Oregonian Stan Hall

In many places it's genuinely, absurdly funny--crass, sleazy and morally questionable, yes, but still funny.

Read Full Review >
63

Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips

Sloppy, grimy but quick on its feet, which puts it ahead of certain other (“The Hangover”) R-rated comedies (“The Hangover”) we’ve seen this summer (“The Hangover”).

Read Full Review >
60

Film Threat Rick Kisonak

The movie doesn’t even try to break new ground–it’s shot entirely on location in familiar Ferrell-McKay territory.

Read Full Review >
58

Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum

Ed Helms and Ving Rhames score laughs. But the breakout is "Step Brothers'" Kathryn Hahn as the tough (sales)girl who keeps up with the boys.

Read Full Review >
50

Boston Globe Wesley Morris

You put up the cash, the movie clunks.

Read Full Review >
50

San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle

Feels forgettable, even though, in the moment, it's often very funny.

Read Full Review >
50

The New York Times Manohla Dargis

A comedy without a shred of obvious filmmaking and an endless stream of good, bad, sometimes terrible, often absurd jokes.

Read Full Review >
50

Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea

Although Will Ferrell materializes for a goofball cameo, The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard lacks a key element that his "Talladega Nights" and "Anchor Man" both had - that is, somebody to like.

Read Full Review >
50

Austin Chronicle Marjorie Baumgarten

The script by Andy Stock and Rick Stempson (Balls Out: Gary the Tennis Coach) can, at times, be a nasty piece of work, and no amount of laughter will fully obscure the gag reflex that occasionally forms in the back of your throat.

Read Full Review >
40

New York Daily News Joe Neumaier

The oh-so-out-there mentality earns some chuckles, but that, along with Piven's preening, gets very trying. A hard sell is still a hard sell.

Read Full Review >
40

Time Out New York Nicolas Rapold

The escapades are tossed off and fall flat, all products of the business-as-usual template created by the film’s producers, Adam McKay and Will Ferrell.

Read Full Review >
40

LA Weekly Vadim Rizov

The few real laughs -- all two minutes’ worth -- come courtesy of Russ Meyer veteran Charles Napier as Dick Lewiston, the angriest macho male anachronism of the year.

Read Full Review >
38

New York Post Lou Lumenick

Jeremy Piven's infamous "sushi defense" for skipping out on a Broadway role is easier to swallow than his performance as a scuzzy auto liquidator who sees the light in The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard.

Read Full Review >
33

The Onion (A.V. Club) Keith Phipps

About Piven: When did it go wrong? When did the caustic character actor guaranteed to liven up even the dullest movie turn into a walking black hole of smarm from which no joy can escape?

Read Full Review >
30

Variety Brian Lowry

The movie simply doesn't deliver -- living hard, selling hard and, before it's over, finally dying hard.

Read Full Review >
30

Washington Post Ann Hornaday

Sloppy compendium of filthy jokes and lowbrow sight gags.

Read Full Review >
25

The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Jennie Punter

A raunchy, fast-paced comedy that, nevertheless, is as flat as the tires on the old Volvo gathering dust in my garage.

Read Full Review >
25

Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez

How can a movie as overstuffed with funny people as The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard be so listless and leaden?

Read Full Review >
25

Premiere Staff (Not credited)

If you are a fan of brainless comedy that willed with bits that seque magically into some semblance of a plot…then The Goods is for you.

Read Full Review >
20

Empire Nev Pierce

Sometimes this kind of comedy just goes too far into rubbishness to make it back.

Read Full Review >
20

The Hollywood Reporter Michael Rechtshaffen

Tediously one-note comedy.

Read Full Review >

What Our Users Said

The average user rating for this movie is 5.9 (out of 10) based on 26 User Votes

Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Katie Y gave it an8:
The Goods, Live Hard, Sell Hard was a funny movie! I thought it had a good plot beggining and to the end... but the ending was really weird. But Will Ferrell.

sk gave it a1:
Worst movie ive ever seen...Will Ferrell is my FAVORITE actor butwow did this movie suck. and the main character wasnt even slightly funny.

Jacob M gave it a3:
This was the first movie I have ever walked out of. It was not funny for the most part, and was actually quite disgusting. Don't waste your money.

sage s gave it a1:
This movie is terrible i walked out in the first 30 min of the movie because of stupidness nudity and overcurseing and only two mild laffs.

C.B. gave it a2:
I wanted to like this movie so bad, but wow did it suck. Shame on Ferrell/McKay for this turd.

Elaine B gave it a1:
Pathetic and gross, but there were a couple of younger guys in the audience laughing occasionally. Very lowbrow and totally brainless. How could Jeremy Priven sink so low and what was James Brolin doing in this thing? I saw him on "The View" promoting it and talking about how he and Barbra Streisand choose their movies carefully. Guess not, Jimbo!!

Chad S. gave it a4:
"The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard" is the sort of slack movie where the comic bits take precedence over the storyline. As a result, the characters have the substance of cardboard, but in this case, the cardboard is interesting because it's made of archetypes. Don Ready(Jeremy Piven) and his associates are badass used car salesmen for hire, who could only exist in the movie world. Put them on horses and the allusion to Westerns become more obvious. But still, a vestige of the cowboy survives, even in the modern trappings of an airplane, as Don lights up a cigarette like the Marlboro man. Don is a descendant of your classic Western hero; he has no place to call home; he's a wanderer. When Ben Selleck(James Brolin) summons Don and his possee into town, the car salesmen lodge at the Hacienda Courts(read: ranch), and hang out at the strip club(read: saloon). Instead of moving livestock, they move cars(the lot is the frontier). Ivy(Jordana Spiro), the boss' daughter(read: the sheriff's daughter), tames Don's wandering spirit when she chooses the outlaw over the gentleman(Ed Helms plays a "man"-band wanna-be), but in the postscript, the happy ending is undermined by the forces of filmic history: a wandering spirit can't be domesticated. They split up after two years. Primarily an absurdist comedy, "The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard" tries to be funny, then tries to be serious(an awkward transition since the people are cardboard), when it looks like Don isn't going to get the girl. John Wayne never said, "The only thing in this world I love is [horses]," but that's the idea Ethan Edwards seems to be expressing at the end of John Ford's "The Searchers". Don feels the same way about cars, and in the long run, he makes good on his declaration.

Read more user comments >

Popular on CBS sites: College Signing Day | March Madness | TV | iPhone | Cell Phones | Video Game Reviews | Free Music

About CBS Interactive | Jobs | Advertise

© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy (UPDATED) | Terms of Use