Genre:
Comedy
Director: Brian Robbins
Starring: Eddie Murphy, Thandie Newton, Eddie
Griffin, Terry Crews, Clifton Powell, Cuba Gooding, Jr.
RunTime: 1 hr 40 mins
Released By: UIP
Rating: NC-16
Official Website: http://www.meetnorbit.com
Opening
Day: 18 Feb 2007
Synopsis
:
Norbit
(Eddie Murphy) has never had it easy. As a baby, he was abandoned
on the steps of a Chinese restaurant/orphanage and raised
by Mr. Wong (Eddie Murphy). Things get worse when he's forced
into marriage by the mean, junk food-chugging queen, Rasputia
(Eddie Murphy). Just when Norbit's hanging by his last thread,
his childhood sweetheart, Kate (Thandie Newton), moves back
to town. In the comedy "Norbit," he'll find that
nice guys sometimes finish first.
Movie
Review:
Eddie
Murphy treads familiar ground with “Norbit”, a
zippy, offensive and ultimately meaningless tryst for its
leading and perhaps more succinctly, its only star. There’s
a surrealistic energy that surrounds “Norbit”
which suitably infuses Murphy’s performance(s) with
an almost schizophrenic frenzy from the gawky and earnest
Buckweat-esque Norbit to the vile and abrasive Rasputina.
But unlike his multi-character foray seen in “The Nutty
Professor” remake, where the goodwill built throughout
the film’s cadre of obese characters inevitably finds
itself deserving of our appreciation, “Norbit”
insists on blazing through the jokes with mean-spirited humour
and a predictably uneven tangent of a couple of genuine laughs
and mostly pre-pubescent slapstick. But since the trailers
have been rampant and rightly indicative of what to expect,
the Eddie Murphy brand of humour will no doubt end up drawing
in crowds.
Murphy’s
shown what he can do with real roles in the past and most
recently in “Dreamgirls” (yes, it would have been
too hard not to mention his role here considering the close
proximity of release dates) where he delved into his role
with enough humour, charm and pathos to keep it grounded and
disciplined. With “Norbit” you can understand
(but not really respect) Murphy’s recidivism into his
safe zone of schtick, sketch-show type showmanship that has
understandably laid the groundwork for his by and large successful
career. A series of events, not all unfortunate and some even
eliciting guilty chuckles are all “Norbit” shows
for its technical wizardry with makeup and effects. There’s
no overall pay-off in the story’s borderline misogynistic
and racist inclinations aside from the alluring Murphy rage
that if observed closely enough, shows an underlying intelligence
waging a losing battle with crassness and audience pandering.
Norbit’s
(Murphy) matrimonial situation is less than satisfying with
Rasputina (Murphy), an abusive (physically and mentally) shrew
that keeps Norbit henpecked and dominated, just barely making
a mockery of the countless spousal abuse cases being waged.
She has a larger than life physicality, and an even bigger
personality. I’m tempted to give Murphy the benefit
of the doubt when it comes to his fat-suit fetish, and claim
that he does not play off fat people’s inner insecurities
given the innate goodness of his characters in “The
Nutty Professor” and Rasputina’s overwhelming
confidence in herself. But then again, the rest of the film
portrays her refreshing confidence as a personality flaw,
a delusive woman in self-denial who’s convinced that
her curvature matches up to the pulchritudinous measures of
society. It’s either that or she’s just another
conflated stereotype - the sassy big black woman who takes
no lip from anybody. Then there’s Norbit’s new
(or not so new) love interest, a blast from the past in Kate
(Thandie Newton) who gives him the confidence to finally free
himself from Rasputina’s folds. Kate’s the quintessential
love interest that pervades this genre. She’s quite
dim, friendly and non-judgmental. She’s also played
by Newton, who looks staggeringly thin as the object of Norbit’s
affection and the impetus for leaving the obese Rasputina.
Way to break the mould!
With
the sticky caramel sentimentality poured over its rocky road
comedy, it resembles a misstep much like Adam Sandler’s
(another massively successful and awfully predictable SNL
alum) “Click” which just couldn’t mix its
tactlessly tossed about barbs with sympathetic glances at
its flawed individuals that apparently need a good kick up
the backside instead of loving hugs.
Movie Rating:
(Glimpses of Murphy’s inherent charms marred by a banal
movie)
Review by Justin Deimen
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