Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins review

16.2.08

Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins Review.
When visiting the home of Georgia to the family of her boyfriend, Bianca bone (Joy Bryant), a model that clawed its way into the spotlight by winning a competition Survivor, spits his future sister-in-law of iced tea and calls it "Liquid of diabetes. " The same label applies to this comedy, but it's okay because its sweetness is cut by tart chicanery. Although it is not necessarily good for you, is tasty and make you laugh. Many African-American filmmakers have been tinkering with their own recipes for films that convey a positive message and the audience to crack. In Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins, Malcolm D. Lee obtained either by not holding back. He batteries in the trash talking and telling the truth while refraining from excess or unused sentiment. Most of the land on which is hilarious, and if occasionally too obscene for the whole family to enjoy together. And intestinas represented the clash between coastal elites and popular down home goes beyond race to address universal themes about culture and family, so it's more than just a guilty pleasure as sweet tea.

Lee casts talented performers, which elevates his material and serves to underscore the lesson that sugar and spices come in all sorts of packages. For example, thin Bianca should know better than to sniff at Roscoe's, more than size, sex-craved sister Betty
(Mo'Nique). We learn she is able to take any man. Mo'Nique unleashed is certainly a high point, but Martin Lawrence also excels as a TV talk show host and self-help author RJ Stevens. Team me is the title of best-selling book of Roscoe and philosophy embraced when he left the Deep South and changed its name. With his son and neglected bridezilla-to-be in the trailer, which returns home to Georgia for the first time in years to help parents celebrate its 50 anniversary. Pending are crazy cousin
Reggie (Mike Epps), the success of Cadillac dealer Clyde (Cedric the Entertainer), the disapproving father (James Earl Jones), high-school sweetheart (Nicole Ari Parker) and all foods fattening emasculating Bianca has made him swear off. Roscoe pretending that it is in control still is not, of course, until the end of the film.

Lee does not bother with intricate history or unique. His address is succinct and not belabor anything. There Meet the Parents Roscoe time when watches her mother with a softball. There are humping dogs, and a mute pain mofeta gag, along with the dialogue too crude to repeat. Roscoe flashbacks to childhood rivalry with orphans Clyde, who is also his cousin and who has Betty in heat, are well executed. The script is filled with fun cultural references with respect to the media, clothing, cars, and the kitchen. Whether you think this is Lee or change stereotypes, it is undeniably fun. The scene ends with Roscoe obligatory things about being a good parent, remaining true to its roots and not forgetting where it comes from. Viewers should have no problem recalling the Jenkins family.

Distributor: Universal
Cast: Martin Lawrence, Margaret Avery, Joy Bryant, Louis CK, Michael Clarke Duncan, Mike Epps, Mo'Nique, Nicole Ari Parker, Cedric the Entertainer and James Earl Jones
Director / screenwriter: Malcolm D. Lee
Producers: Scott Stuber, Mary Parent and Charles Castaldi
Genre: Comedy
Rating: PG-13 for crude and sexual content, language and some drug references
Running time: 114 min.
Release date: February 8
from boxoffice.com

1 Comments:

hara said...

omg! roscoe jenkins is frickin awsome! me and my besties had a great laugh! i luv'luv'luv this movie. i hope there will be a 'roscoe jenkins 2!!
if you dont luv this there is somthin wrong with your brain!
from
me