Barbershop 2:
Back in Business
review by
Cynthia Fuchs, 6 February 2004
Put Your Back Into It
Barbershop 2: Back in
Business begins with a little history. The camera descends
through an array of fireworks, lighting up the sky over a street
scene titled "July 4, 1967, Southside Chicago." A drunken Uncle Sam
staggers in an alley, a jokey allusion to the national celebration,
but also an emblem of the national turmoil of the time, the dire
divides of class and race, the eruptive distrust between
generations. Just then, another figure stumbles through the scene --
it's Eddie (Cedric the Entertainer), the charismatic, mush-mouthed
raconteur whose opinions regarding Rosa Parks ignited minor
controversy in 2002.
On the run from a pair of cops,
young Eddie slams into the Uncle Sam (one more comic-political swipe
at the elderly emblem), then dashes into the first open door, Calvin
Sr.'s (Javon Johnson) barbershop. When the proprietor agrees to hide
him from his pursuers, Eddie later explains to Calvin Jr. (Ice Cube)
35 years later, he feels not only indebted to his new friend, but
also like he's found a "home."
These first five minutes grant
Eddie and the barbershop some specific background, of resistance and
community. They also make Barbershop 2 look like it will be
different from the 2002 original, which, save for Calvin's
occasional references to his father, is firmly situated in the
present, namely the son's personal struggle over whether to keep or
sell the shop he's inherited. But what follows is not very different
from what came before. Calvin will face another version of the same
dilemma, and he'll come to a similarly right decision. In between,
he'll trade japes with the same characters and hang out in the same
place: the barbershop.
Once again, the central issue is
real estate. Whereas the original had Calvin's personal finances in
turmoil, here the concerns are more widespread, in particular, the
gentrification of the neighborhood where his shop has been in
business for so many years. This year's crisis is initiated by the
incursion of a Nappy Cutz franchise across the street, courtesy of
the Porsche-driving developer Quentin Leroux (Harry Lennix). The new
joint has a fancy website advertising milk baths, shiny new
appliances, and a basketball hoop. What it doesn't have, of course,
is a sense of history, loyalty or community.
In the moral and social economy
assumed by Barbershop, this lack makes Nappy Cutz the enemy;
even worse, it's part of a broader urban development program,
including the buyouts of other local vendors and the political and
financial advancement of the slick Alderman Brown (Robert Wisdom).
Standing opposed to the "progress" are solid citizen Calvin and his
bickering headcutters -- sassy Terri (Eve), pretty Ricky (Michael
Ealy), gentle "African" Dinka (Leonard Earl Howze), and the "Eminem
of the barber world," Isaac (Troy Garity). Also back for another go
is straight-laced Jimmy (Sean Patrick Thomas), now working for
Alderman Brown, and increasingly squeamish about the deals getting
made.
As before, the film allots brief
moments to assorted interactions: Isaac and Ricky compete, Jimmy and
Terri argue, Calvin tries to control the chaos (he goes so far as to
prohibit profanity in the shop, for a minute, to create "family"
atmosphere). Skipping from moment to moment, the movie is attentive
to local detail (girls jumping rope, folks on the street), less
concerned with plot. Calvin drops into a series of mostly unrelated
situations during the day, visiting Miss Emma (Jackie Taylor), now
in danger of losing her daycare business; caring for his own baby;
and chatting with his infinitely patient wife.
And of course, the movie lingers in
the shop long enough to let Cedric riff on President Clinton, Mike
Tyson, and R. Kelly. That Eddie's story is fleshed out repeatedly
during the film's flashbacks -- he's in love with a beautiful woman
he meets on the subway, he's down with the Black Panthers (at least
until they talk about killing and dying to make a point), he's a
dismayed observer of the riots following Dr. King's assassination --
such that his running commentary is grounded in experience that's
both nostalgic and evocative.
While these peeks into Eddie's past
grant him specificity, and situate his cynicism in some Forest
Gumpian experience (as if to say, "He's been there, so he has the
right to speak"), he meets his match in the present day, in Gina
(Queen Latifah), who appears briefly, to exchange insults at a
barbeque-to-support-the-barbershop. Here they perform for an
enthusiastic audience, Gina noting Eddie's resemblance to Shamu, and
Eddie noting another woman's resemblance to Chewbaca. It's an
old-school throwdown, rowdy, friendly, and good fun.
Indeed, such moments illustrate
both Barbershops fundamental appeal, an appreciation of
ritual and exchange, a generosity of spirit. And oh yes, along with
all that comes the flipside ethos, for Latifah has signed on not
only for this moment, but also to pitch her own spin-off
franchise-to-be, the movie Beauty Shop, featuring Gina and
her own crew of chatty beauticians, in a shop next to Calvin's. Ah
well, it's the American Way. |
Directed
by:
Kevin Rodney Sullivan
Starring:
Ice Cube
Cedric the Entertainer
Michael Ealy
Eve
Sean Patrick Thomas
Leonard Earl Howze
Troy Garity
Queen Latifah
Written
by:
Mark Brown
Don D. Scott
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may
be inappropriate for
children under 13.
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