Malibu's
Most Wanted Movie Review:
Shakespeare
once wrote that something was rotten in Denmark and in the
case of the new film "Malibu's Most Wanted", it
is Malibu that contains the olfactory threat. The threat
is in the form of a movie that takes its one joke premise
to painful lengths and forces the audience to endure the
same pointless banter and lazy stereotypes ad nausea. The
so called story centers around Brad Gluckman (Jamie Kennedy),
a rich Jewish kid from Malibu who thinks that he is so ghetto,
and that he is a rapper with something to say about life
in the hood. Brad's father Bill (Ryan O'Neal) is running
for Governor, and his son's behavior has become an issue
in the campaign, as he is a walking sound bite for the opposition.
So what is a loving yet lost father supposed to do when
therapy fails, naturally he turns the fate of his son over
to his campaign manager Tom (Blair Underwood).
Tom
hires two actors to kidnap Brad and scare the hood out of
him by showing him what things are really like in the inner
city thus setting Brad straight and keeping him out of the
way during the campaign. The actors are hired and the kidnapping
goes as plans. The only issue is that the men hired to scare
Brad, are even less from the hood than their intended target
as Sean. (Taye Diggs), and P.J. (Anthony Anderson) are classically
trained actors who worry more about character motivations
and authenticity then developing a solid plan to reform
Brad.
While
this could have been an amusing premise, it quickly degrades
into the same joke over and over as Brad is oblivious to
what is happening around him, and has no consistency in
his character. There are times when any sane person would
realize that it is time to drop the act and play along if
nothing else than for self-preservation. Sadly we only see
a small side of this, and Brad fluctuates between poser,
player, and thug in scenes with little neither transition
nor motivation. Watching the film reminded me of a sketch
comedy piece that went on far to long and after getting
a few laughs did not have anything to sustain it. It became
tiresome to hear the same banter between the characters
and see little development or motivation for the actions
even by comedies standards. The result is a film with little
to say where the characters walk through their one-note
parts while the audience keeps waiting for a payoff that
never comes. My advice, skip this turkey and watch "Anger
Management" as at least that film has some laughs and
some effort put into it.
1 star
out of 5
Gareth
Von Kallenbach
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