Since Dinner for Schmucks is going to be released nationwide in the US tomorrow (30th July 2010), I thought I'd start a new thread where we can discuss our thoughts on the actual film after watching it and post reviews. The other Dinner for Schmucks thread can be found
here and is still open for people to post general articles, interviews, pics, videos etc.

Reviews:
SalonQuote:
Best of all, perhaps, is New Zealand actor Jemaine Clement (of "Flight of the Conchords" and "Eagle vs. Shark") as Kieran, a smoldering, intensely self-involved artist who paints only giant canvases of himself pursuing various sexual and sensual activities. As Barry observes, when face to face with one of Kieran's paintings, "A very attractive man! He can fit a whole octopus into his mouth!"
Kieran, the octopus-eating, zebra-fisting artist (I'd better not explain that any further), may be unbelievably pompous, but at least he isn't a soulless corporate f*ckwad. When a whole series of Murphy's Law misunderstandings -- culminating, somehow, with Tim on his knees in a fancy restaurant, proposing to nutso Darla with a ring he intended for Julie -- leads Julie to run away to the immense sexual metaphor that is Kieran's goat ranch, I was all like, you go, girl! He's just not that into you! (Kieran, to Barry: "Have you ever lived among a herd of goats, for months at a time, as one of them?" Barry: "No." Kieran, mildly: "That surprises me.")
Read the full review hereThe RepublicQuote:
But Clement, best known for "Flight of the Conchords," is a total scream here, cut very much from the same skintight cloth as Russell Brand in "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" and "Get Him to the Greek." It's as if he exists in his own movie — a deliciously weirder and infinitely more interesting one.
Read the full review hereLansing State JournalQuote:
Jemaine Clement, meanwhile, is fantastic as a wild-man artist for whom Julie works, pure untamed id who justifies his decadence by calling it all part of "process" (pronounced with a long O, which for some reason makes it hilarious).
Read the full review hereChicago TribuneQuote:
It has a lot of funny people going for it. The most valuable is Jemaine Clement, the sonorous New Zealander who slayed in HBO's "Flight of the Conchords" and who even managed to make a sustained Michael York impersonation pay off in the recent "Gentlemen Broncos." Here he plays a supporting role as an outlandishly pretentious artist who's catnip to the ladies, and whose self-regard is like a ZIP code unto itself
Read the full review hereThe Film StageQuote:
Meanwhile his (gorgeous) wife Julie (Stephanie Szostak) is a curator whose latest client is the eccentric Kieran, played hilariously by Jemaine Clement.
Flight of the Conchords star Jemaine Clement is the real highlight here, an eccentric artist obsessed with animals to the point of pseudo-bestiality. His off-the-wall character and outlandish responses make for a ridiculously entertaining time.
Running nearly two hours, when we finally get to the dinner, the film has nearly worn out its welcome. The unexpected absurdity that makes up the first two acts was an refreshing surprise, but when we start to expect it, things get dry. Thankfully, it doesn’t last too long and the conclusion involving Clement, Carell, Rudd and Szostak is quite gratifying.
Read the full review hereSlant MagazineQuote:
…it's showcasing a few genuinely funny performances from Carrell, Clement, and Zach Galifiniakis, who plays Barry's co-worker. Carrell makes a handful of scenes exquisitely painful to watch, proving why his work on The Office attracted the filmmakers' attention. Galifianakis and Clement are likewise very funny…
Read the full review hereThe Seattle TimesQuote:
Jemaine Clement ("Flight of the Conchords"), waving his perfectly practiced pout like a flag, steals the movie as a self-important artist — a man who talks through his own heavy breathing, like he's entranced by his own allure.
Read the full review hereQuote:
Went to "Dinner for Schmucks" last night, and while it's not bad (some very funny performances, including two scene-stealing turns by "Flight of the Conchords" alums Jemaine Clement and Kristen Schaal), it suffers from a common problem in Hollywood comedy these days: It's too long.
Read the full review here