Top Five (FILM REVIEW)
Top Five
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Chris Rock Rolls in Romantic Comedy/Film Industry Satire
In Birdman, Michael
Keaton played a fading star trying to revive a career that had been in decline
since he’d become typecast after playing a superhero in a series of
blockbusters on the big screen. That plotline wasn’t all that far off from the
arc of Keaton’s real-life fate following an outing as Batman back in 1989.
The similarly-themed Top
Five features Chris Rock as Andre Allen, a comedian who has become too closely
associated with “Hammy the Bear,” the popular protagonist of a humor-driven film
franchise. Consequently, he’s been having a hard time making the transition to
dramatic roles.
At the point of
departure, we find Andre in the midst of promoting his newest movie, Uprize, an
historical drama about a slave insurrection on the island of Haiti.
He’s allowed New York
Times reporter Chelsea Brown (Rosario Dawson) to tag along for the day, since
she’s been assigned by the paper to prepare a profile on him.
Sparks fly, the two
flirt, and it’s pretty obvious right off the bat that the two are attracted to
each other. Trouble is, he’s already engaged and about to marry Erica Long
(Gabrielle Union), a shallow, self-centered reality show star.
It’s equally clear
that Andre and his high maintenance fiancée are ill-matched, so anybody who’s
ever seen a romantic comedy can figure out where this one’s headed. And while
the plot does everything to prevent Andre from wising up until the very end, it
simultaneously affords the acid-tongued funnyman ample opportunities to point
out show business’ shortcomings.
Besides being
peppered with plenty of inside jokes and pithy comments about Hollywood, Top Five is memorable for boasting
the most star-studded cast of the year. The dramatis personae includes J.B.
Smoove, Kevin Hart, Adam Sandler, Jerry Seinfeld, Cedric the Entertainer, Tracy
Morgan, Whoopi Goldberg, Charlie Rose, DMX, Jay Pharoah, Taraji P. Henson,
Romany Malco, Gabby Sidibe, Luis Guzman, Sherri Shepherd and Ben Vereen.
As you might imagine,
many of the celebs are limited to blink and you missed it cameos, though the
production does manage to milk a little magic out of each one’s brief moment in
the limelight. Nevertheless, make no mistake, this is a Chris Rock vehicle, and
the picture is at its best when the irreverent comic is at his cockiest.
A clever, laff-a-minute
adventure worth the investment for the hilarity, even if it telegraphs where
the love story might be headed.
Excellent
(3.5 stars)
Rated R
for sexuality, nudity, crude humor, pervasive profanity and drug use
Running time: 101
minutes
Distributor: Paramount Pictures
To see a trailer for Top
Five, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jejCmmawzLY
No comments:
Post a Comment