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SummaryLike the young Indian braves of long ago, Benjamin Fiedler (Sabara) is about to undergo an initiation rite that will take him from boy to man. But rather than face the perils of the hunt, he must endure something far worse -- a Bar Mitzvah in Brentwood, California. (Miramax Films)

Directed By:Scott Marshall

Written By:Mark Zakarin

Keeping Up with the Steins

Metascore
57
User score
Generally Favorable
7.1
My Score
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Metascore
57
59% Positive
13 Reviews
32% Mixed
7 Reviews
9% Negative
2 Reviews
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  • Positive Reviews
  • Mixed Reviews
  • Negative Reviews
75
San Francisco Chronicle
The tribute to an aging parent is moving and gives this routine comedy an extra something.
75
The A.V. Club
What begins as a scathing but loving satire of materialism loses its way once it turns into a warmhearted after-school special about a nice young Jewish boy discovering the true meaning of the bar mitzvah.
70
L.A. Weekly
As director, Scott Marshall displays an unsurprising flair for selling a joke, but also a fine sense of dramatic pacing and, even better, a gift for brevity, neither of which, it could be argued, are innate skills of his famous filmmaking family.
63
New York Post
A sitcom with enough big laughs and emotional truth to get audiences past awkward pacing and some slow spots.
58
Baltimore Sun
Garry Marshall, old pro that he is, couldn't be more endearing as the grandfather, struggling gamely to make things right.
42
Entertainment Weekly
Garry Marshall takes over the movie (no mystery: his son, Scott, directed it), and Keeping Up With the Steins turns into a recipe to forget: chopped liver with ''heart.''
0
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
There is potential for laughs in a satire of rich people spending big money on religious galas, but that is not even the real subject of the picture.
See All 22 Critic Reviews
User score
Generally Favorable
7.1
57% Positive
4 Ratings
43% Mixed
3 Ratings
0% Negative
0 Ratings
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  • Positive Reviews
  • Mixed Reviews
  • Negative Reviews
Oct 13, 2014
6
Tss5078
Being Jewish, I have a bias towards liking a film like this. The usage of Yiddish, along with the many exaggerations of the Jewish family are something most people won't understand, unless they grew up around it. Parts of this film I found to be hysterical, while my non-Jewish friend, sitting next to me, didn't get it at all. As for the film, it's a lie before the credits even stop rolling. Keeping Up With The Steins, really has very little to due with the Stein family, as they are part of the background story at best. The film is actually about a broken family, forced together on the eve of a child's Bar Mitzvah. Benjamin Fiedler (Daryl Sabara) is turning 13, which in the Jewish religion means that he is about to become a man. His parents are well off and are making huge plans for the event, but Ben wants no part of it. In an attempt to take the attention off himself, he sends an invitation to his estranged Grandfather that he's never met, a Grandfather, who shows up to the families wealthy neighborhood in an old RV, with a woman half his age. This is where the heart of the story comes from, as father and son are forced together after fifteen years. Jeremy Piven stars as the son and believe it or not he's a big time Hollywood agent, living in a life of luxury. This toned down version of Ari is forced to see his father, played by the legendary Garry Marshall. For the past 15 years, he's been living as a hippie, teaching on an Indian reservation. As soon as they see each other the two are at odds and it really is very funny. The star of the film is Spy Kids, Daryl Sabara, who I have never liked. He's just always so shy and painfully awkward, I really just don't understand his appeal. While he is a major part of the story, the parts of the film that feature him without Marshall or Piven are just painful. Keeping Up With The Steins isn't raunchy and much of the humor is intertwined in the Jewish religion. If you're not Jewish, you'll probably have the same reaction my friend did. Personally I loved it, but I can understand how this film won't appeal to everybody.
See All 7 User Reviews
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  • Miramax
  • A Road Picture
  • Winsome Entertainment
May 12, 2006
1 h 30 m
PG-13
Something's not quite kosher.
St. Louis Film Critics Association, US
• 1 Nomination
The Stinkers Bad Movie Awards
• 1 Nomination
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