You Got Served
review by
Cynthia Fuchs, 30 January 2003
Bump, Bump, Bump
Just in time for their feature
film debut, the enormously popular B2K has disbanded, due to "cash
disputes." In fact, You Got Served arrives in theaters while
rumors are flying as to efforts to reconstitute the group (with
Brandy's brother Ray-J replacing Omarion, no less). Whether this
timing means that fans will flock to theaters to see the group as a
group -- Omari "Omarion" Grandberry, DeMario "Raz-B" Thornton, Dreux
"Lil' Fizz" Frederic, and Jarell "J-Boog" Houston -- one last time,
or whether they will eventually get back together is not clear. In
any case, the ongoing story has made for much drama, notably on
106 & Park.
You Got Served offers
considerably less emotional intensity: the rote plot has a dance
crew competing for big money, fame, and, of course, their own,
briefly disrupted friendship. While the plot is surely rote, the
dance scenes (which comprise much of the film's 93-minute running
time) are tremendous. Designed by the boys' usual choreographer Dave
Scott, these numbers are vibrant, explosive, and mostly inventive,
pulling from b-boy, mime, ballet, modern dance, pop, cheerleading,
and hiphop traditions. Unfortunately, these moments, presided over
by local sage Mr. Rad (Steve Harvey) ("We settle it on the floor
like men!"), and setting the B2K squad against a team headed by
mean, spiky-haired white boy Wade (Christopher Jones), only make the
between-numbers machinations seem creakier.
This is not so different from other
musicals. Also like other musicals, this one features stiff line
readings, ludicrous dialogue ("This crew tried to chump my crew
today!", "Sonny sold us out!", or even, "You suckers got served!"),
and a cloying storyline (amid the dancing, tension between two best
friends, and a budding romance, a wholly predictable death leads to
rearranged priorities and reconciliation). The primary tension
arises between David (Omarion) and Elgin (Marques Houston, cousin to
Omarion and J-Boog), longtime best friends and dance crewmates
(other mates include the disaffected B2K guys Vick [Raz-B], Rashaan
[Lil' Fizz], and Rico [J-Boog].) David and El fall out over a
two-part contrivance: David falls for El's medical-school-bound
sister, Liyah (Jennifer Freeman), and because of this distraction,
doesn't help his boy El with a one-last-time "delivery" for the evil
huffy-puffy gangster Emerald (Michael "Bear" Taliferro).
Though it's never spelled out what
they deliver in their colorful backpacks, El is jumped in a
crackhouse hallway, where he suffers his beatdown in arty silhouette
while David's finishes dessert with Liyah. So then it's on. David
rushes to the hospital and feels plenty guilty about what's happened
to El, and Liyah tries to convince her brother to ease up on the
hating, to no avail. Even the occasional appearance of Meagan Good,
as Liyah's best friend Beautifull ("with two Ls," she likes to coo),
doesn't soften up El's stubborn resolve.
Determined to carry on despite
their trumped-up trauma, each puts together a crew to dance off for
a $5,000 prize from MTV and a chance to perform in a Lil' Kim video.
This means that the final showdown will be a major performance,
hosted by La La Vasquez and wunderkind choreographer Wade Robson. It
also means that Kim plays herself at the showdown (emceed by Wade
Robson himself), giddily inviting the final two crews to battle
"street style": "You know how I like it baby," she declares,
"Straight hood."
Amid this superficial plotty mess,
the movie also works as a strangely mesmerizing gloss on the nasty
intricacies of the music business. Specifically, its tangled
production pedigree says something -- precisely what is unclear --
about the current difficulties of B2K (The Boys of the New
Millennium).
For one thing, You Got Served
is directed by the group's manager, Chris Stokes (cousin to Raz-B),
whose previous directing experience includes music videos and 2001's
House Party 4. He also happens to manage IMx, formerly
Immature, the group that launched Marques Houston's solo career.
Surely, it's only complicated coincidence that Stokes "discovered"
Brandy, whose brother is lined up to replace O as lead singer for
B2K, even following rumors that Raz-B, J-Boog, and Lil' Fizz have
signed an "advisor and business agreement" with another management
company, CMX. Stokes remains the manager of Marques Houston and
Omarion, whose first solo album is set for a March release.
Stokes' official response to the
breakup is posted on the T.U.G. Entertainment website, expressing
his "shock": "They are like my sons, and I can't understand how, or
why they would do this, but if the boys can hear my voice now, I
want them to know that I love them and I wish them the best. Plus, I
am surprised because they are still under contract with me. I love
all of you and all of the fans out there. Please pray for B2K." The
statement is actually longer than this, but the line about the
contract creeps in at the end, a detail that, oh dear, must have
slipped the minds of his erstwhile son-like clients. (Omarion, for
his part, has retreated from initial upset at the walk-out, telling
MTV News he'd like to "get back together" with the others, following
his solo projects, because "I think people would enjoy it.")
The tumult has certainly been
immense for the famously enthusiastic B2K fans. This makes the
film's rather weak representation of at least one source of tension
-- Omarion getting all the attention -- something like the
proverbial car wreck, simultaneously hard to see and hard to turn
away from. At least the dance scenes supply their own, more potent,
mini-dramas, so the rest of it becomes less salient. |
Written and
Directed
by:
Christopher B. Stokes
Starring:
Marques Houston
Omari Grandberry
Jennifer Freeman
Jarell Houston
Dreux Frederic
Steve Harvey
Lil' Kim
Meagan Good
DeMario Thornton
Christopher Jones
Malcolm David Kelley
Rated:
PG-13 - Parents
Strongly Cautioned.
Some material may be
inappropriate for
children under 13.
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