Scary Movie 3
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 31 October 2003
Death
warmed over
Just
when you thought the Scary Movie franchise had run out of
ideas, here it comes again -- looking like it's run out of ideas.
Where Shawn and Marlon Wayans' first film was a surprisingly fresh
satire of already-self-satirical slasher flicks (and, not
incidentally, promised no sequels), Scary Movie 2 felt
strained, scavenging "old" horror films like The
Exorcist for material (also not incidentally, the Wayans were
fairly vocal at the time concerning their discomfort with doing the
sequel they promised not to do).
For
Scary Movie 3, they have left the project to the man they
ripped off to begin with, venerable director David Zucker, of Kentucky
Fried Movie and Airplane! fame. Working with him is
writer Pat Proft (who co-wrote the Naked Gun movies), and
Craig Mazin. Together they've come up with a string of jokes,
increasingly unfunny as they settle into something of a plot and the
trajectory becomes obvious. And the string is uneven: the appearance
of Michael Jackson impersonator by way of The Others is
nastily entertaining, just as the abuses of Mother Teresa are
arduous. Such erratic rhythms are familiar from Zucker's previous
grab bag movies, though here even the non-formula of that formula is
wearing thin. Besides, the fact that he's looking for work that
copies his own, following the flat-out awful My Boss' Daughter
and Rat Race, is a little sad, but hardly surprising.
In
this installment, perpetually plucky Cindy Campbell (Anna Faris)
returns as a styling blond, all grown up into a TV anchorwoman
(presumably, a vague nod to Courteney Cox's Gale Weathers). She
comes on a videotape that, once viewed, brings on a phone call
announcing the watcher's horrible death seven days later (here the
caller occasionally sounds like Lord of the Rings' hissy
Gollum). As in Gore Verbinski's "original" Ring,
itself a remake of the Japanese Ringu, this business is
introduced via a couple of not-so-smart girls discussing their
experience with a certain scary "video." Because these
hyper-voluptuous Catholic School Girls are played by Pamela Anderson
and Jenny McCarthy, some jokey discussion is given over to another
infamous disturbing video, involving a boat. (If nothing else, Pam,
a.k.a. Striperella, again demonstrates the enormity of her breasts
and some bizarrely inchoate sense of her own comedic limits and
values.)
Following
this wacky prelude, Scary Movie 3 starts piling up the
spoofs: Cindy looks up her friend Brenda Meeks (Regina Hall), whose
death in the last film is apparently exaggerated, who has also seen
the tape; that is, she's going to die again, this time leading to a
series of not-so-hilarious grotesqueries visited upon her corpse.
Charlie Sheen appears as the damaged former Father Tom, whose farm
is beset by ominous crop circles à la Signs (the scene where
he flashes back to the tragic car accident includes the cutesy
in-joke of Sheen's real-life wife Denise Richards as the prescient
dead wife).
Here
again, the film offers up the wise trooper (Camryn Manheim) who is
evacuated from the film almost as soon as she shows up, and the
movie invites the same annoying question (this time spoken by Tom,
rather than left to you): if the aliens have mastered space travel,
how come wooden doors confound them? Also as before, the aliens make
ostensibly spooky appearances, rustling cornstalks and trilling in
the darkness. Presumably, either Alien #1 (Troy Yorke) or Alien #2
(Marco Soriano) also appears walking through the backgrounds of
human assemblies, gazing at the video cameras trained their way.
One
change-up comes in SM3's intertwining of yet a third movie's
plotline with the two primaries: Tom's brother, George (Simon Rex),
introduced via "portentous" camera spins that give Tom and
George mild whiplash, is a young man with "a dream, to have a
dream." Namely, he wants to be an earnest white boy rapper, à
la 8 Mile. (This is Scary Movie 3's best joke -- 8
Mile as approximate horror movie.) George's ambition introduces
the badly wigged Mekhi Phifer character, Mahalik (Anthony Anderson),
who loves George a lot, and emcees the rap battles in Da Hood (only
a short bus ride from the farm). In this capacity, he observes,
"Finally, the white man is going to school the black man on how
to rap." And yes, George throws down with lyrics about
mayonnaise and Wonder Bread, beating out Fat Joe in front of
everyone.
Lest
you fret that the white man does too much schooling in Scary
Movie 3, The Matrix rears its cheaply digital-effected
head, in the form of Orpheus (Eddie Griffin) and Aunt "Just
call me the Oracle" Shaneequa (Queen Latifah, who might as well
stick to the phone-service commercials for all the good she's doing
her career with this role). Not that Cindy actually learns much in
this episode, but Shaneequa does deal appropriate vengeance on that
annoying hair-brusher in The Ring's hideous death's-a-coming
video.
By
the time the film winds down to its several anti-climaxes, Zucker
and company have apparently wholly lost steam. And so he taps his
favorite go-to guy, Leslie Nielsen, to play President Harris, with
Chief of Staff John Wilson (D. L. Hughley) and Secret Service Agent
Thompson (Ja Rule in a suit, playing Tupac in his headset).
Washington's connections to the movie's alien business and the
videotape business actually look tenuous here, even given the
obvious reason the Pres should be interested.
In
any event, Harris and his security team pile into the official SUV
to track down Cindy, who's conveniently at Tom's farm (don't even
ask how she gets there -- it's the ordained collision of plot
shards) and two apparently competing sets of hiphop artists
(including Method Man, Redman, RZA, Raekwon, U-God, Macy Gray, and
Master P) who proceed to shoot each other dead. What this has to do
with anything is something of a mystery, until you consider that, if
the moral is to make nice with those who look "other" (and
that message is uttered a few times here), including aliens and
grisly little girls who have drowned in wells, what better way to
underline the idea than to kill off the wealthiest hiphoppers, so
other even to these other others?
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Directed
by:
David Zucker
Starring:
Anna Faris
Charlie Sheen
Simon Rex
Regina Hall
Anthony Anderson
Queen Latifah
Pamela Anderson
Jenny McCarthy
George Carlin
Leslie Nielsen
Ja Rule
D.L. Hughley
Fat Joe
Simon Cowell
Method Man
Redman
Macy Gray
Master P.
RZA
U-God, Raekwon
Written
by:
Shawn Wayans
Marlon Wayans
Buddy Johnson
Phil Beauman
Jason Friedberg
Aaron Seltzer
Craig Mazin
Pat Proft
Brian Lynch
David Zucker
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may
be inappropriate for
children under 13.
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