Nutty Professor II: The
Klumps
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 28 July 2000
Cake
In
Nutty Professor II: The Klumps, Eddie Murphy gets to have his
cake and eat it too. And not just literally. In playing six
characters B the titular Professor Sherman Klump, all of his grown
relatives, and his not very repressed alter ego Buddy Love -- Murphy
gets to perform and also critique just about every aspect of his own
multi-faceted and long-evolving comedic style. This is a remarkable
achievement, no doubt. Consider that many actors don't even have a
specific style, much less one with more than one or two angles, much
less one that lends itself to successful self-examination (or
something like that). Murphy's fortunate to have such a wealth of
material close at hand, and he exploits it to the max.
From
start to finish, the film is suffused with Eddie Murphyness, his
grand sense of himself and his desire -- stated repeatedly in
interviews about the film -- to do "what no one else has done
before." There are other elements involved, of course,
including Rick Baker's frankly incredible prosthetics effects,
direction by Peter Segal (whose previous pictures include Tommy
Boy and My Fellow Americans), and a decent soundtrack, by
Def Jam's finest and friends (JayZ, Eve, Montell Jordan,
Redman and Eminem, Sisqo and Foxy Brown's remix of "Thong
Song"). But while The Klumps is nominally written by two
sets of writers, including several veterans of previous Murphy
characters and movies (on SNL, and in Nutty, Coming
to America, and Boomerang) and Paul and Chris Weitz (American
Pie and Chuck & Buck), the funny stuff is plainly all
Murphy, who famously ad-libbed much of Klump character scenes, a
point illustrated briefly but amusingly by the outtakes at film's
end.
There
are at least two ways to think about The Klumps, both
premised on Hollywood's number one mantra: making money. First, it's
the inevitable sequel to 1996's Nutty Professor, a remake of
a Jerry Lewis film whose surprising $270 million profits were
largely attributed to the two remarkable scenes featuring Murphy as
all the Klump family members save Ernie Jr. (Jamal Mixon), whose
primary function in both films is, apparently, to stuff his face.
This makes it like one of those Saturday Night Live movies, a
four-minute skit stretched to 100 or so minutes, that is, something
of a crapshoot.
And
second, it's the inevitable next Eddie Murphy movie, in type and
scope and attitude. It's common knowledge that his film career was
rejuvenated by the first Nutty (as the insiders call it),
that he was suddenly and surprisingly re-christened as a
family-movie-remake star, and went on to make Dr. Dolittle.
The new image mostly expunged his previous rep, which stemmed from
his mean-spirited stand-up humor (the homophobic stuff was a bit
strained after his encounter with the transvestite, after all), his
politically-charged SNL humor (recall the fabulous Buckwheat
and Mr. Robinson's Neighborhood material), and even his reasonably
successful anti-player consciousness in Boomerang, and recast
him as a comedian For the Whole Family. Certainly, this was a
strange development at the time, but it also paved the way for the
subsequent developments in "family" comedy. If the genre
was always leaning toward so-called juvenile jokes B farts and poop
and peeping-tomfoolery B with Murphy's entry into the game, the
rules loosened some more, and "nasty" gags and
below-the-belt observations increased. This isn't to say that Murphy
is responsible for the shift in family comedy -- Jim Carrey is more
immediately accountable -- but it is to note Murphy's usually
overlooked part in the process.
In
The Klumps, Murphy gets to be "kind and gentle and
brilliant," as Sherman is called by his university science
department colleague and fiancee Denise Gaines (Janet Jackson). He
also gets to be lascivious as Granny
Klump, sweet as Mama, gruffly masculine as Dad. Not to mention his
return as and to Buddy Love, who makes his escape from Sherman's
body by cloning his goo-self with basset hound DNA, which means he
gets to act like a dog throughout the film, chasing cats, hanging
his head out car windows, and peeing on newspaper he's laid out in
the men's room, all of which is suitably funny and creepy at the
same time.
The
basic situation of the comedy involve Sherman's efforts to marry
Denise, Buddy's efforts to emerge from and sabotage Sherman, the
family's use of Sherman's miraculous "youth juice." But
all this is mostly irrelevant. What's important and often very funny
is the family's verbal feuding, as they comment on one another's
shortcomings in terms of age, sex, appetite, career, appearance,
intelligence, fashion sense, etc., etc. The family's immediate
dilemma is the impending wedding, which does provide minimal plot
structure.
The
film's first scene is Sherman's nightmare vision of what will happen
at the altar when he looks down on Denise's pushed-up cleavage and
gets the hard-on to beat all hard-ons (leading to Buddy's startling
first appearance, emerging from Sherman's pants in place of his
penis), and ensuing comic encounters include those between Sherman
and Denise's rocket-scientist parents, Buddy and Sherman as two
separate people (due to some loony tunes DNA extraction business),
Sherman and his still-greedy college Dean, Richmond (Larry Miller),
and the Dean and a genetically altered gigantor hamster. One
observer describes this last as the hamster making the poor man
"his bitch." I'm not sure how to read the fact that this
line provided the one moment when the bulk of the preview audience
was not wholly and uproariously engaged: it elicited a slight pause,
as if they didn't know quite what to think.
During
a summer filled with all kinds of low humor on movie screens, the
fact that an image or an idea might be a little over the edge is
surprising. Is it that furry little animals B unlike, say, chickens
-- are off-limits as fodder for butt-jokes? Or is it that Murphy is
so out there, in the midst of his family film career, that his
comedy might still actually offend someone (especially by returning
to his old standby, gay-baiting)? In this context, it's worth noting
that the climax of the film turns on Sherman's effort to recombine
with Buddy, to "eat" him, as Sherman himself puts it (a
phrasing that leads his father to pull back in alarm: "You're
headed down the wrong off-ramp there!"). So, for all the
heterosexual romance at the center of the film's surface plot, the
real point is for Sherman to love his inner Buddy, even when --
especially when -- he's out.
What
may be most remarkable about The Klumps is how it can, quite
like Murphy's FOX-TV series, The PJs, joke about issues and
attitudes that more mainstream comedy might not touch, and still
come off like it's unconditionally mainstream, playing on primetime
network television and in a family movie. Murphy's targets are
selective, his timing unarguably shrewd. Then again, this seemingly
edgy tone in The Klumps may not be so different from what's
worked as mainstream material in the past. And this despite the fact
that the most unnervingly familiar moments of recognition in the
movie actually don't involve Murphy per se, but Murphy as the crazy
Klumps. For as they gripe and grump and sling all kinds of arrows at
one another, the most lucid and insightful character among them is
Denise. She shares one especially odd and tender scene with Anna
(Mama) Klump, as Denise tries on her future in-law's old, huge
wedding dress while agreeably nibbling on a plate of s'mores pie.
Even aside from the genderfuck going on here, there's something both
creepy and touching about seeing Miss Jackson play the
"normal" one.
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Directed by:
Peter Segal
Starring:
Eddie Murphy
Janet Jackson
Jamal Mixon
Larry Miller
Written by:
Steve Oedekerk
Barry W. Blaustein
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