Michelle Darnell (McCarthy) had a rough childhood. She grew up in an orphanage and was bounced around from one foster home to another. She never had a family, or anyone, to really show her love and affection. Having only herself to rely on, she climbed her way to fame and fortune and didn't care who got hurt in the process.
When she goes to prison for insider trading, she comes out 5 months later to find she has no home, no money and no one to even give her a ride. Desperate, she ends up at the home of her former assistant, Claire (Kristen Bell; Frozen). Suddenly inspired, Michelle finds her new business venture and ends up, once again, screwing over anyone who tries to get close.
This is not McCarthy's best work. She doesn't inspire hatred or pity for the poor orphan turned mogul. Bell and Peter Dinklage (Game of Thrones) are fine, working with the subpar dialogue they were given. Kathy Bates (American Horror Story) is entirely underused, which is a waste of her considerable talent.
The real tragedy of this movie is that, for a comedy, it isn't remotely funny. There are about three times I actually laughed and I found that many of the jokes just fell flat. At an hour and forty minutes, the film was entirely too long, and I just wanted it to end and put me out of my misery.
The script is also part of the problem. There was so much going on, and the story had too many micro chasms to keep up with. At one point, the movie reminded me of Troop Beverly Hills on a bad acid trip.
The Boss is a miss for McCarthy and unworthy of anyone's time or money. It was unfunny, uninspiring and simply boring. I've seen McCarthy do so much better and this was, although not unexpected, terrible in almost every way.
While McCarthy and Director Ben Falcone (Tammy) are married in real life, they should keep their partnership distinctly personal, as this is the second film they have collaborated on that wasn't remotely good.
Do yourself a favor - don't bother wasting your time or money on this one. You'd be better off renting Bridesmaids and spending a few hours laughing and appreciating one of McCarthy's better films.
Grade: D