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Spy comedy 'Keeping Up' plays it safe, delivering few laughs

Best known as the brooding protagonist of AMC's "Mad Men," Jon Hamm is also a gifted comic actor.

Hamm first hinted at this potential in the web series "Between Two Ferns," in which interviewer Zach Galifianakis pretends to have contempt for his guest. That video is still worth watching, if only to highlight the chemistry between the two performers.

Sadly, their latest collaboration, "Keeping Up With the Joneses," has only a fraction of it. It is the sort of inoffensive comedy that fails to evoke any strong reaction - including laughter.

Jeff Gaffney (Galifianakis) and his wife, Karen (Isla Fisher), live in a sleepy Atlanta suburb. He's a human resources specialist at a nearby tech company and she's an interior decorator. With their kids away at summer camp, their lives have settled into monotony.

But when new neighbors Tim and Natalie Jones (Hamm and Gal Gadot) move in across the street, the glamorous couple becomes the talk of the cul-de-sac. They are so well-traveled - so incongruous to suburban life - that Karen immediately suspects they are not who they say.

Karen is correct, of course: Tim and Natalie are American spies who suspect that someone at Jeff's company may be selling microprocessors to an international arms dealer. Predictably, the two couples become embroiled in an espionage scheme, while Jeff attempts to connect with Tim on a man-to-man level.

Director Greg Mottola broke through with the raunchy "Superbad," so it's not unreasonable to hope that the jokes will eventually kick into a higher gear. Alas, the script by Michael LeSieur ("You, Me and Dupree") dutifully avoids shock.

That is not to say that "Keeping Up With the Joneses" has no pleasures. As an example, Jeff and Tim discover an underground Chinese restaurant in one scene, where Jeff gets under Tim's skin in a way he does not anticipate. Fisher is a gifted comedian, too, and there is a long sequence where Karen follows Natalie until they find each other in a vulnerable, intimate place. (There's an unfortunate double standard here: We see Fisher and Gadot in their underwear, but never their male counterparts). No matter the setup, however, the film always handles its characters delicately, with all the risk-taking of a middlebrow sitcom.

The presence of spy characters guarantees that "Keeping Up With the Joneses" will have action scenes, yet these are generic, too. Tim leads the couples on a car chase over abandoned roads, yet there's no sense of urgency or suspense.

The climax fares no better: The gunfights are perfunctory and the accompanying pratfalls are telegraphed too far in advance.

"Keeping Up With the Joneses" is ostensibly about suburban ennui, and the fear that embracing the American dream may mean giving up on life. Jeff and Karen are in a rut, at least until Tim and Natalie shake them out of it. That's a concept worthy of exploration, especially in comedy, since harsh truths are often more easily delivered with laughs. But Mottola and LeSieur seem to have actively avoided the pursuit of wisdom, settling for broad gags - and the occasional explosion - instead.

The title of this film is a misnomer. Shrewd audiences will be way ahead of the Joneses, as well as the Gaffneys, all four of whom are stuck in the same rut, one whose outcome is never in doubt.

“Keeping Up With the Joneses”

★ ½

Starring: Zach Galifianakis, Isla Fisher, Jon Hamm, Gal Gadot, Patton Oswalt

Directed by: Greg Mottola

Other: A 20th Century Fox release. Rated PG-13. Contains crude language, violence and sexual situations. 101 minutes

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