Barbershop
review by Cynthia Fuchs, 13 September 2002
R-E-S-P-E-C-T
As The Girl in Barbershop,
Philadelphia's own E-V-E shows one more time that she plays very
nicely with boys. In her first extended film role (that is, more
than the few lines she had in XXX), Eve Jihan Jeffers holds
her own on screen with some notably charismatic actors, including
Ice Cube and Cedric the Entertainer. This isn't to say that she
hasn't endeavored to expand her performance horizons previously --
back in April, she and Salma Hayek joined other celebrities to read
from The Vagina Monologues at the Apollo. As she told
Newsweek (2 September 02), she takes her acting career seriously, in
particular appreciating the "art" displayed by Billy Bob Thornton in
Sling Blade, in which he's "able to play that character throughout a
whole movie."
Her enthusiasm is admirable. And
it's not like she doesn't have other things to do. As a matter of
fact, Barbershop is opening just over a week after she
dropped her third album, Eve-Olution, for which she's been doing the
usual rounds -- TRL, 106th & Park, Leno, the cover of Complex and
Essence, where she's looking trés fashionable with P. Diddy -- and
charming everyone. Anyone who's been paying attention already knows
that Ruff Ryders' First Lady has had a plan for the future in place
for some time -- she wants to produce, invest, and give back. Toward
those ends, she's working with the best, winning an MTV Video Music
Award last year for the wonderful "Let Me Blow Ya Mind," produced by
kingmaker Dre and enlisting the crossover magic of Gwen Stefani, and
hit-dueting again with this year's (slightly less wonderful) "Gangsta
Love," with Alicia Keys.
While Eve may never be the J. Lo of
hiphop -- and why would anyone want to be so overexposed? -- she
most definitely has what they call "presence," charging up the
screen whenever she comes in view. For the most part in
Barbershop, this involves her being in said shop, where her
character, Terri, cuts heads and braids a few too. The film -- which
recalls the affable attitude and pacing of Ice Cube's Friday films
(the third due in theaters this November) -- takes place over the
course of a single day, which means that, while not a lot actually
happens, there's still a large crew of characters and a fair amount
of plot (some of it strained) to be laid out in a short time.
The movie's basic concept is clear
in the title: the shop is a traditional communal space, where folks
hang out, argue, tell stories, play checkers, and sharing plain talk
about a range of topics. Director Tim Story (who has previously made
music videos with R. Kelly, India.arie, and Tyrese) and Cube have a
vision of sorts (as much as it's schematized by writers Mark Brown,
Don D. Scott, and Marshall Todd), and that vision begins and ends
with community: like it is, was, and will be.
The primary tension of the day
begins when Calvin (Cube), who inherited the place from his father,
who inherited it from his father, sells it to a local (here,
Chicago's South Side) gangster named Lester (the always superb Keith
David). Though Calvin's pregnant wife Jennifer (Jasmine Lewis)
suggests that this may not be the best time to start up a new
business, he wants to build a studio so he can produce music. But of
course, she's right -- almost as soon as he has the cash in his
hand, Calvin's rethinking his decision, and spends the rest of the
day trying to figure a way out of the deal, which Lester has
naturally arranged wholly to Calvin's detriment anyway.
Calvin's not the only one whose day
isn't going so well. Terri's begins when she learns that her
trifling boyfriend Kevin (Jason George) is hiding a girl under his
bed: she arrives at work in a fury, topped off when she finds that
one of her coworkers drank her apple juice. Though she's clearly the
object of much brotherly affection among the guys, and for Nigerian
immigrant Dinka (Leonard Earl Howze), of a deeply felt crush, no one
wants to fess up, but a theme becomes apparent -- it's about
respect, for property, but more importantly, for people, as they
live in contexts, have expectations and desires, and express
themselves. The most trivial act can be loaded with meaning and
consequence -- what you do affects those around you.
This is, of course, a useful, if
sobering lesson. Thank goodness, the film doesn't deliver it in a
particularly sobering fashion. This light touch stems from its
characters, most painted in brief, deft strokes. Eddie (Cedric the
Entertainer), for example, used to work for Calvin's dad, and now he
spends his days regaling coworkers and customers alike with stories
of the old days (when he demonstrates his shaving technique,
complete with pearl-handled razor, everyone pays attention) and his
rowdy, contentious opinions ("All Rosa Parks did was sit her ass
down!" or again, "Martin Luther King was a ho!").
While those who find themselves
caught up in Eddie's challenge-conversations might be mistaken for
"types" at first glance, Barbershop allows them a little room to
push against what you might expect. So, college boy Jimmy (Sean
Patrick Thomas) presumes that he's only cutting hair for tuition
money, urging his fellows to think beyond the shop walls, but he
comes off sounding like he's riding some high horse, and the others
resent it. Isaac (Troy Garity, son of Jane Fonda and Tom Hayden),
who is Jewish, becomes a particular target for Jimmy, underlined
during the scene where Isaac arrives to work, in his SUV: his black
girlfriend slides her tongue down his throat, his hand grabs her
ass, and Jimmy's face goes screwy, like he's just eaten a lemon.
While Jimmy catches flack for acting too straight, he criticizes
Isaac for dressing, talking, and acting too street.
The one barber who has street cred
(in the form of two strikes on his arrest record) is Ricky (Michael
Ealy), whom Calvin has hired in an effort to help him turn things
around. When, at film's beginning, the convenience store across the
street is robbed, the local cop (Tom Wright) immediately suspects
Ricky, and come by the shop to warn him they have tape of the
getaway vehicle, and will be calling on him when they can read the
license plate. Ricky protests, rightfully, and the film reveals
right off that he's not guilty, that the culprits are JD (Anthony
Anderson) and Billy (Lahmard Tate). They think they've scored big --
they took the store's brand new ATM -- but of course, they'll learn
that crime doesn't pay. Unfortunately, while Anderson is sharp as
ever, the occasional cuts to this subplot (how will they get the
machine open?) slows everything else down, distracting from the more
compelling community at Calvin's.
By the end of the day, everyone --
including reluctant Calvin -- comes to appreciate both the bickering
and the love at the shop, and the film does a decent job displaying
the entertaining and supportive atmosphere. This is, in most every
sense, a family film, not so raunchy or puerile as, say, the latest
Austin Powers venture. And, unlike Carwash, for example, it's not
about getting over and it's certainly careful about its language
(early on, Calvin tells Terri to "stop cussin'," because this is a
family business, where kids and ladies get their hair cut). And
unlike the Fridays, it does take its family appeal seriously; even
Cedric tones down for PG-13 consumption.
The film's multiple charms are all
sweet. From its opening tune, Fabolous and P. Diddy's "Trade It All
(Part 2)," which gets radio-attuned viewers in the groove
straightaway, to its series-of-little-vignettes structure,
Barbershop aims to please rather than challenge or confront. The
baseline problem -- will Calvin recover his shop? -- never threatens
to be too hard to resolve. However simple it gets, it insists on
being respectful: The Girl gets on with the boys, they figure out
how to get on with each other, and Ice Cube demonstrates yet again
that there's nothing he can't do well. |
Directed
by:
Tim Story
Starring:
Ice Cube
Anthony Anderson
Sean Patrick Thomas
Eve
Troy Garity
Michael Ealy
Leonard Earl Howze
Keith David
Lahmard Tate
Jazsmin Lewis
Tom Wright
Cedric the Entertainer
Written by:
Mark Brown
Rating:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may be
inappropriate for children
under 13.
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