Wednesday, January 07, 2009 | 9:14 p.m.

Movie Reviews by Movie Reviewers

Home > Lifestyle Columns > Movie Reviews
Please contact your local newspaper editor if you want to read Movie Reviews's column in your hometown paper.
movie reviews

Recently

  • In 'Doubt,' a Catholic School's Presiding Nun Grapples with Uncertainty
    It's a pretty serious leap from "Mamma Mia!" to Mother Superior, but Meryl Streep manages to go from the singing siren of last summer's ABBA-centric flick to the scolding sister of "Doubt" with amazing grace. Streep's Sister …

  • Frank Langella's Nixon gives 'Frost/Nixon' its bite
    Over three nights in the summer of 1977, British personality David Frost interviewed disgraced former President Richard Nixon in a major TV event that gripped the nation. It was a mesmerizing, probing, give-and-take for which the combatants trained …

  • 'Earth' is a Not-so-Subtle Update of the 1951 Classic
    One of the shiny, festive orbs that descends on the planet in "The Day the Earth Stood Still" contains a blob of goo known as Keanu Reeves. More precisely, it holds an alien being named Klaatu, who uses his cosmic powers to fashion a Keanu …

  • Filmmaker's 'Chess' game
    The less you know about the blues and American music history, the more you'll enjoy "Cadillac Records," which features BeyoncŽ as Etta James, Jeffrey Wright as Muddy Waters and Oscar-winner Adrien Brody as Polish-born record label maven …

Jackson Joins Mac in a Film Epitaph Fit for a King of Comedy

"Soul Men" is soul food for the heart, and the multiplex.

Let's say it: You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll come out of the theater humming "I'm Your Puppet."

Bring a hankie. Bernie Mac, so funny, so talented, died last August at age 50 from pneumonia. "Soul Men" serves as a grand epitaph for a man who emerged in "The Original Kings of Comedy" and whose warm, family-friendly "The Bernie Mac Show" was a TV hit for five years.

In "Soul Men," he plays Floyd Henderson, a retired backup singer, who, along with Louis Hinds (scintillating Samuel L. Jackson), toured the country as a duo with their smooth, Pips-like choreography and sweet sounds after lead Marcus Hooks (John Legend) went off to establish a solo career.

Years later, Hooks dies of a heart attack while performing, and crotchety Henderson and Hinds are corralled for a VH1 tribute concert at New York City's legendary Apollo Theater. Problem is, the men despise each other; dormant wounds over women and money never healed.

Their patter is risquŽ: "You should not dig for diamonds in another man's mine," says Jackson.

The hardest working man in show business (he averages four to five films a year), Jackson turns in a crafty performance as a dreadlocks-wearing ex-con who lost his royalties in a poker game and lives now in a ratty apartment.

Mac's Henderson, meanwhile, invested wisely, including in a car wash with sexy female attendants. Creeping old age, though, has depressed him. He has an artificial hip, is bored with playing golf and yearns for the old, glory days on the road.

"Soul Men" has raw language and raucous sexual escapades, including a wild one featuring Mac and the robust Jennifer Coolidge (from "Best in Show"), who picks him up in a country bar where the men, on their way to New York, stop to work on their tunes.

Says she, "I've never been with someone so old."

Responds he, "You're no teen queen yourself."

Mac is brilliant, performing with a looseness similar to his stage demeanor.
It's not just what he says that's funny but how he says it.

Director Malcolm Lee, who guided stand-ups Martin Lawrence, Mo'Nique, Mike Epps and Cedric the Entertainer in the engaging "Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins," handles the pair gingerly, letting them riff, jazzlike at times, reigning them in when needed.

Their road trip to New York in Mac's lime-green Cadillac Eldorado with the license plates MUTHASHP includes a stop in front of a dozen or so folks at the Flagstaff Motor Inn. Trying to hit a high note on "Hold On, I'm Coming," a button flies off Mac's thickening waistline, a guy in the audience getting struck in the head.

There's a classic vignette on the side of a dusty highway, the car saddled with a flat tire. One of their old hits, "I'm Your Puppet," comes across the radio ("No. 3 in 1969," barks the disc jockey). Mac and Jackson take a moment to re-create their old steps right there, outside, dusty shoes moving on the pavement like it was 1969 all over again.

Stopping in Memphis, they return to the home of the late, special woman in their lives and find that her daughter (luminous Sharon Leal, from "Dreamgirls") is in an abusive relationship with a petty drug-dealer boyfriend. Jackson, hardened from years in the penitentiary, takes care of business.

In the end, Henderson and Hinds find themselves on stage at the Apollo with Leal joining them for a joyous "Do Your Thing."

Over the closing credits, there's a touching Bernie Mac tribute, the gifted comedian chatting about "not cheating the audience ... you want to leave a lasting impression, leave them something to remember."

He left the heartbreaking, hilarious "Soul Men."

"Soul Men." Rated: R. Running time: 1 hour, 43 minutes. 3.5 stars.

To find out more about Lee Grant and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.




AddThis Social Bookmark Button RSS Get RSS Feed for Movie Reviewers Email updates Email me Movie Reviewers updates Comments Comments
Originally Published on Monday November 10, 2008

Editors Picks - Lifestyle Columns
The Greenest Christmas
Shawn Dell Joyce
A List of Gratitude
William Moyers
No Easy Recipe for Cooking Up a New Kitchen
Christine Brun
See All
More Movie Reviewers
Dec. `08
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
30 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 1 2 3
View By Month
About the author Print friendly format Write the author Email This Article to a friend
All newspaper editors want to know what their readers like. If you would like to read this feature in your local newspaper, please do not hesitate to share your enthusiasm with your local newspaper editor.

 

Shop Creators Syndicate

 
Wednesday, January 07, 2009 | 9:14 p.m.
About Creators | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Editor's login | FAQ | En Español
Copyright © 2006 Creators.com. All Rights Reserved.
Web Development by JJCO