Community Login: (Create an Account)
Search the Site:
Loading...
Follow Us:

View Poll Results: Rate "Barbershop"

Voters
2. You may not vote on this poll
  • *****

    1 50.00%
  • ****1/2

    1 50.00%
  • ****

    0 0%
  • ***1/2

    0 0%
  • ***

    0 0%
  • **1/2

    0 0%
  • **

    0 0%
  • *1/2

    0 0%
  • *

    0 0%
  • 1/2

    0 0%
Results 1 to 8 of 8
  1. #1
    The Penguin's Avatar
    The Penguin is offline Moderator of Fowl Play
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    South Dakota
    Posts
    21,207

    "Barber Shop" Talkback (Spoilers)

    Like This Thread!

    Everyone's Gettin' Lined Up



    Release Date: September 13, 2002
    Studio: MGM
    Director: Tim Story
    Starring: Ice Cube, Eve, Anthony Anderson, Cedric the Entertainer, Sean Patrick Thomas, Troy Garity, Leonard Howze, Lorenzo Clemons, J. David Shanks, Jazsmin Lewis

    Plot Summary: A smart comedy about a day in the life of a barbershop on the south side of Chicago. Calvin (Cube), who inherited the struggling business from his deceased father, views the shop as nothing but a burden and waste of his time. After selling the shop to a local loan shark, Calvin slowly begins to see his father's vision and legacy and struggles with the notion that he just sold it out. Calvin's barbershop is filled with an eclectic and hilarious cast of characters that share their stories, jokes, trials and tribulations. In the shop we find Eddie (Cedric), an old barber with strong opinions and no customers. Jimmy (Thomas) is a highly educated barber with a superiority complex who can't stand Isaac (Garity), the new, white barber who just wants a shot at cutting some hair. Ricky is an ex-con with two strikes against him and is desperately trying to stay straight. Terri (Eve) is a hard-edged woman who can't seem to leave her two-timing boyfriend. And lastly there's Dinka, a fellow barber who is madly in love with Terri but doesn't get the time of day.

    Visit the on-line 'barber shop' here.

    Buy the movie!


    Comments?


    "Barbershop" yesterday in theaters everywhere. I never make it to as many fall movies as I would like, but I hope to catch this one.
    "Not until we are lost do we begin to understand ourselves." – Henry David Thoreau

    The WWE Big Question™ #67 - 2011 AwardsWWE NXT 5WWE Superstars

  2. #2
    JohnCrichton's Avatar
    JohnCrichton is offline An astronaut!
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    Madison, WI
    Posts
    10,213
    Sounds like a good movie from the Onion review I read.... and they don't like any movies!

    Barbershop
    As strange as it may seem, an entire subgenre of black film can be traced to Joel Schumacher, the flashy hack behind such high-gloss, low-substance, whitebread fare as St. Elmo's Fire and Batman & Robin. Schumacher wrote the screenplay for 1976's delightful Car Wash, which became the template for 1995's Friday and last year's abysmal semi-remake The Wash. Like those films, Barbershop borrows Car Wash's 24-hour timeframe, brassy ensemble cast, and prominent soundtrack. But where lesser Car Wash progeny only incorporate their predecessor's most obvious elements, Barbershop replicates the intangible qualities that made it special: its sunny spirit, stellar supporting cast, and surprising sociological savvy. Perhaps the most wholesome endeavor ever to bear Ice Cube's name, Barbershop takes place largely over the course of an eventful day at the titular locale, which functions as a business, a parlor room, and a community center. As the owner and proprietor of the barbershop, Ice Cube serves as the film's solid moral center, with a dizzying variety of supporting characters in his orbit. A refreshingly class-conscious comedy-drama that refuses to talk down to its audience, Barbershop tackles serious issues (assimilation, reparations, class conflict) without reducing its characters to mouthpieces for differing viewpoints. Much of the credit belongs to the director, music-video veteran Tim Story, who does a terrific job juggling multiple subplots and a sprawling, uniformly fine cast while maintaining a breezy pace. Screenwriters Mark Brown, Don D. Scott, and Marshall Todd don't downplay the sociological and societal forces affecting their characters' lives and choices, but still find time for slice-of-life comedy and entertaining digressions. A celebration of the power and strength of community, Barbershop treats nearly all of its characters with respect and dignity, turning stock types that urban comedies generally portray as boobs—particularly an Indian shopkeeper and a white barber immersed in black culture—into real people rather than walking punch lines. Barbershop's entire cast deserves praise for its deft ensemble work, but Cedric The Entertainer nearly steals the film with a hilarious turn as an iconoclastic ghetto philosopher with novel theories on everything from Rosa Parks' actual historical significance to the proper way to celebrate Martin Luther King's birthday. He draws many of Barbershop's biggest laughs with his revisionist take on black history, but he also disperses a good deal of common-sense wisdom without coming across as didactic. Where Cube serves as Barbershop's moral and narrative focal point, Cedric The Entertainer is its cantankerous but oversized heart. —Nathan Rabin

  3. #3
    Failure's Avatar
    Failure is offline Entertainment Mod
    Join Date
    May 2001
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    2,884
    This does look like a cool movie, but I might have to wait til it comes out on DVD to see it.

  4. #4
    Kat Pryde's Avatar
    Kat Pryde is offline Free Falling
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    CHLOLLIEville
    Posts
    758
    I needs ta wait a month or so until I could see it. . .

    . . . it's always free in da naval base here .

    I can't wait! It looks funny and cool!!
    Okay, so now we're going to die. Does your plan have a second part or should I just give you a kiss now? - Pete Wisdom, Pryde & Wisdom
    I was playing cynical back then.- L (Ryuuzaki), Death Note
    You mean it's not obvious yet?! I'm about to celebrate becoming an only child! - Azula, Avatar the Last Airbender

  5. #5
    Anthonynotes's Avatar
    Anthonynotes is offline Jason Fox tech support
    Join Date
    May 2001
    Location
    Milwaukee
    Posts
    7,596
    Considering seeing this film; enjoyed Cedric on "The Steve Harvey Show"...

    -B.
    Visit my other online spots:
    My blog, covering technology, comics, and animation, plus my weekly
    minorities in cartoons feature!
    Twitter

  6. #6
    JMo's Avatar
    JMo
    JMo is offline I mean...DANG!
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    99
    I reccomend this film to anyone looking for a good laugh!!! This movie has gotten good reviews, and here is one more for the masses! Go and see Barber Shop!!! It's actually kinda heart-warming...ina way
    "Cry me a river."

    As said by Batman to Superman in Twilight of the Gods...

  7. #7
    mbaker is offline Banned
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Location
    Washington, PA.
    Posts
    2,531
    I think one of the reasons why this movie succeeded has to do with the fact that it tears apart all of the false promises, and exagerrated claims that race husslers like Jesse Jackson (HE'S EVERYWHERE! HE'S EVERYWHERE.) spread throughout the black communities of this country. The notion that minorities can't make it without afirmitive action, and what not. Jackson's reation to the movie is all the proof you need. The producers of this movie deserve A great deal of credit for this.

  8. #8
    BeastBoyWonder's Avatar
    BeastBoyWonder is offline Teen Titans Go!
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Location
    Ann Arbor, MI
    Posts
    2,236
    This movie was hilarious, and had several meaningful underlying themes. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

 
toonzone quick jump
This community is listed in
the mega forums index project
Single Sign On provided by vBSSO