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Teddy (Kevin Hart), the protagonist of Netflix’s “The Man From Toronto,” is an irritating, motormouthed, underachieving idiot.

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Anyone who can spend more than ten minutes with him deserves a medal for patience. 

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Director Patrick Hughes’ latest is both 112 minutes and a hodgepodge of so many other movies that it becomes the most obnoxious of cinematic collages. 

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The signposts on this journey include the darkly comic hitman thriller, the goofy loser trying to prove himself underdog flick 

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The stand-up comedian vanity project, the mistaken identity plot, and the violent actioner. 

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It’s the kind of venture that only strengthens my conspiracy theory that many Netflix films are created 

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You could walk away from this movie every ten minutes and not miss anything when you returned. 

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Baldheaded Woody Harrelson plays the titular Torontonian, a very effective hitman whose vicious reputation for torturing precedes him. 

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Hired to extract information by any means necessary, The Man From Toronto 

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Barkin lays waste to numerous cars, incinerating them in impressive Joel Silver-worthy fireballs.