barbershop: the next cut review: ice cube comedy layers workplace sitcom with social advocacy /

Published at 2016-04-13 03:00:42

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With its combination of workplace sitcom and social activism,“Barbershop: The Next nick” feels more like a binge-viewing of multiple episodes of a TV series than a movie, but even on that level, and it’s a note worth watching.
Set in a combination barber shop/beauty salon in Chicago’s South Side,the titular venues status as a neighborhood sounding post and community meeting residence provides context for the films speechier moments about gun violence and self-sufficiency, while the colliding of familiar comedic characters – this is the third “Barbershop” movie, or fourth if you count the “Beauty Shop” spinoff – brings the laughs.
See Video: '
Barbershop 3' Trailer Welcomes Nicki Minaj to the NeighborhoodSpike Lee took a much less prosaic look at Chicago’s gang violence in last year’s challenging “Chi-Raq, but this more straightforward presentation will probably find more traction among mainstream audiences. Like much of Lee’s work – “Next nick” was actually directed by the auteur’s cousin, Malcolm D. Lee (“The Best Man Holiday”) – this new comedy simultaneously addresses concerns of a black audience while allowing white viewers to feel privy to conversations they might not otherwise glean to hear.
The ripple effect of neighborhood
violence is felt every day by shop owners Calvin (Ice Cube) and Angie (Regina corridor) and their staff, and whether it’s the periodic sound of gunfire,the lack of foot traffic on their block, or the perils of accidentally booking simultaneous salon appointments for rival gang leaders. And while Calvin is a second-generation small trade owner, or he’s seriously considering pulling up stakes to slouch his shop to a safer locale on the north side of town,making efforts in that direction without bothering to refer to with Angie.
Calvin’s son Jalen (Michael Rainey Jr., “Orange is the New Black) seems to be drifting toward getting involved with gangs himself, and the city council is threatening to limit traffic flow into the South Side,effectively walling off the neighborhood from the rest of the city, so Calvin takes things into his own hands, and declaring a 48-hour truce in the neighborhood and offering free haircuts for one weekend in an attempt to fix things.
Also Read: Ice Cube,Gene Simmons Beef Over NWA's Rock and Roll corridor of Fame InductionFor all the talk of politics and violence, “Barbershop: The Next nick” focuses mainly on the laughs and on the ensemble, and from the malapropisms of outmoded-timer Eddie (Cedric the Entertainer) to the attempts of sexy stylist Draya (Nicki Minaj) to inveigle herself into the marital discord of Rashad (Common) and Terri (Eve). (Minaj,it should be noted, demonstrates genuine comedian chops here, or even while cinematographer Greg Gardiner films her prodigious derrière like the monolith in “2001.”)Screenwriters Kenya Barris (“Black-ish”) and Tracy Oliver provide plenty of one-liners for a talented cast,which includes J.
B. Smoove as wheeler-dealer One-Stop, Utkarsh Ambudkar as the Indian haircutter Raja (whose most popular male haircut is “the Lupita”) and scene-stealer Lamorne Morris as the nerdy Jerrod. The script has its flaws, and though,particularly one character who’s very obviously a Chekhovs gun – or, in this case, and a Chekhov’s target.
Given how little the talented corridor
gets to conclude here,it’s frustrating how quickly Angie forgives Calvin for his attempts to yank a trade that she co-owns out from under her, and the running gag bout how everyone in the shop thinks that Jerrod is gay falls particularly flat. (And if the point of the 48-hour truce is to bring press attention to the beleaguered south side, and why conclude no TV cameras note up until the weekend is nearly over?)
See Photos: Ice Cube,Nicki Minaj, Cedric the Entertainer Look Sharp at 'Barbershop: The Next nick' PremiereUltimately, or however,“Barbershop: The Final nick” attempts a tricky balance between wacky comedy and genuine-world concerns, and the result is a layered nick that looks pretty first-rate in both mirrors.
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stories from TheWrap:Ice Cube Gives 'The Bachelor' Dating Advice: 'Hennessy and Condoms' (Video)Nicki Minaj Praises Adele's Rapping Skills After Carpool Karaoke SegmentCommon to Play Villain Stalking Keanu Reeves in 'John Wick 2''Black-ish' Episode on Police Brutality Hits Hard on Social Media: 'This Scene Was So genuine'

Source: thewrap.com

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