A Madea Christmas (FILM REVIEW)
A Madea
Christmas
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Tyler Perry’s Back in Drag for Adaptation of Holiday-Themed
Play
Mabel “Madea”
Simmons is the moralizing, motor-mouthed senior citizen created and first introduced on stage
by the incomparable Tyler Perry. The compulsive granny is a self-righteous vigilante who can’t help
but intervene on the spot whenever she sees an innocent victim being bullied by
a sadistic villain.
At the point of departure in A Madea
Christmas, the eighth screen adventure in the popular film series, we find her
working as Mrs. Santa Claus in a downtown Atlanta
department store. The seasonal job affords the politically-incorrect impersonator
an opportunity to shock kids and their ears-covering parents with a profusion
of her trademark off-color asides and English-mangling malapropisms.
Soon after she’s unceremoniously
relieved of her duties, Madea decides to drive with her niece, Eileen (Anna
Maria Horsford), to tiny Bucktussle,
Alabama to spend the holidays
with the latter’s daughter, Lacey (Tika Sumpter), the local schoolmarm.
What neither of them knows is that
Lacey recently eloped with a likable local yokel, but failed to inform her mom
about the marriage because Conner (Eric Lively) is white. She fears her mother
might object to the interracial liaison.
Complicating matters further is the fact that coming along for the ride
is Oliver (JR Lemon), Lacey’s ex-boyfriend who’d like to rekindle a little
romance.
Meanwhile, Oliver has told his
parents, Buddy (Larry the Cable Guy) and Kim (Kathy Najimy) about the nuptials,
and they are arriving soon from Louisiana,
so something’s gotta give. But rather than come clean, Lacey enlists her new
in-laws’ help in hiding the truth.
Unfolding in accordance with the
age-old “One Big Lie” TV sitcom formula, A Madea Christmas is a pleasant, if
predictable, modern parable peppered with plenty of humorous asides. Tika
Sumpter and Eric
Lively manage to generate just enough chemistry to be convincing as shy
newlyweds.
But the production is at its best
when Madea and equally-outrageous Buddy are trading barbs toe-to-toe. For
instance, when he tries to tell “the one about the two rabbis and the black
dude,” he’s cut off by Madea asking if he’s heard “the one about the stray
bullet that kills the redneck for telling the story about the two rabbis and
the black dude.”
Sassy sister squares-off against
backwoods hillbilly for lots of harmless laughs!
Very Good (3 stars)
Rated PG-13
for profanity, crude humor and sexual references
Running time: 105 minutes
Distributor: Lionsgate
Films
To see a trailer for A
Madea Christmas, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-SLe_EIpeWI
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