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Lottery Ticket (2010)

By Devon Gilbert

It ain't no Friday

I viewed Lottery Ticket with very low expectations; after all, a PG-13 version of Friday doesn’t seem like a very smart idea.  In fact, a PG-13 movie that takes place in the projects seems like a bad idea period.  I love Friday, and a lot of what made that movie work (besides Chris Tucker) was the non-stop hilarious profanity by very profane characters.  That being said, I found Lottery Ticket enjoyable enough.  There were some funny parts and the movie was entertaining, if way too predictable.  There were funny characters, but also funny actors wasted.  In a way, the whole movie was give and take.

The basic plot is one that has potential.  In a project filled with several poor people, everyone is buying tickets for the lotto, which is at $370 million.  Kevin (Bow Wow) is a laid back teen who works at Foot Locker and doesn’t play the lotto because he feels it’s just designed to make money off poor people’s hopes.  However, that doesn’t stop his Grandmother (Loretta Devine) from sending him to buy her a ticket, with her special numbers she got from Jesus.  While Kevin is buying her a ticket, he is coerced into buying one for himself from the cashier.  Of course, he wins, and news travels fast in the projects.  Pretty soon everyone wants to be Kevin’s best friend and more importantly, some just want his ticket.

That’s the movie’s basic plot, with everything else pretty much barrowed from Friday.  Instead of Chris Tucker, Brandon T. Jackson tries to be Tucker as Kevin’s best friend Benny. I’ve seen Jackson in a few movies and he seems to be a decent actor, but he is no Chris Tucker and for some reason it was impossible for me not to compare the two.  I thought the friendship portrayed between Kevin and Benny worked, but Jackson playing the funny, zany, always in trouble best friend didn’t.  Instead of Tommy “Tiny” Lister, you get Gbenga Akinnagbe (whom was part of the excellent cast on HBO’s The Wire) as the bully (Lorenzo) who provides the climax amongst a few other things.  I thought Akinnagbe’s Lorenzo was one of the funniest characters in the movie.  I looked forward to his scenes because his over the top anger was laugh out loud funny.  Also, Mike Epps as Reverend Taylor is mainly why I watched the movie, and he was hilarious.  It’s too bad he wasn’t in the movie longer.  Loretta Devine also had some funny parts.  On the opposite end, Charlie Murphy was woefully wasted.  He was consistently hilarious on Chapelle’s Show but doesn’t have the time or material to be funny in this movie.  Most of the other side characters aren’t that funny even though they’re trying, but sometimes they’re good for a chuckle.  Though again, none are as funny as the side characters in Friday.

I would actually go to church if Epps was the Reverend

The movie has many flaws in the plot department.  For one, it seems like walking around with the unsigned lotto ticket is just plain ignorant.  Kevin would probably be beaten and mugged in the nicest of neighborhoods, let alone the projects.  Also, there’s a side plot in which Kevin goes out with a very hot girl even though it’s so obvious she wants him just for his money I find it impossible to believe the dumbest of human beings wouldn’t see it, instead of trying to get with his other best friend Stacie (Naturi Naughton.)  Though wouldn’t you know it, he soon realizes he loves Stacie and not the moneygrubber.  Also, I think the idea of giving back to the projects was a fantastic one and could have been its own movie.  However, Lottery Ticket really doesn’t do anything with this idea.  Also, when you find out Ice Cubes’ loner character used to be a boxer, you know exactly how the movie will end.

I guess if you’re hungry for a ghetto comedy, Lottery Ticket may be just enough to satisfy if your expectations are in check.  After all, there really aren’t a lot of them.  Just don’t expect to watch it over and over again like Friday.

Lottery Ticket:  B-

The Kids are All Right (2010)

By Devon Gilbert

The Kids are All Right is a well-made movie about marriage.  In a lot of ways it is a basic movie about the subject.  For example, one partner doesn’t have enough time for the other because of work and one partner is having a fling with somebody else, just like any movie about marriage.  In this movie, the couple going through the normal trials of marriage is Nic (Annette Bening) and Jules (Julianne Moore).  Both Nic and Jules used the same donor’s sperm to get pregnant, so they have raised two children together.  Though they are a lesbian couple, they don’t seem much different than any other marriage.  Their kids, Laser (Josh Hutcherson) and Joni (Mia Wasikowska), seem to also view their parents as perfectly normal too.  However, Laser is interested in meeting his donor father, Paul (Mark Ruffalo), so he gets Joni to set up a meeting since she is now 18 and can request one.

Right off the bat I will say the premise is very routed in real human emotions.  It’s very understandable that no matter how much the kids love their moms, they would be curious about their sort of father.  It’s also understandable that Paul might really take to the kids and feel sort of like their father, because technically I guess he is.  Finally, it’s understandable that Nic and Jules will feel threatened by this because it could potentially disrupt their family unit.  And let’s face it; the premise for this movie is only going to become a more common one in America as time goes on.  It is nice to see a comedy that has its head grounded in reality, though this movie’s more like a dramedy.  There are some funny parts and parts that just make you smile, but ultimately the movie gears more toward drama.  Though to be fair, the movie is never sad and it’s certainly not heavy.

In some ways I wish the movie had gone for more of a comedy vibe or gone the opposite route and gotten more serious with the material.  There are some humorous situations and funny lines but mainly the movie focuses on how Paul’s presence is breaking down Jules’s family, though mostly because Jules sleeps with him.  Without this being a straight comedy I would have expected some serious issues to be addressed.  For instance, I mentioned before that the kids were all right with their parents being lesbians (and indeed the title of the movie acknowledges this) but you’re telling me they don’t get teased at school for it?  And honestly, Laser wouldn’t ever get mad and say something about them being lesbians?  I doubt it.  The movie should have dealt with that but my biggest gripe is how director Lisa Cholodenko treats Paul.

Paul seems like nothing but a nice guy and a positive father figure in the lives of Laser and Joni.  Many scenes of the movie even show the positive aspects of having a father figure for the children, like how he lets Joni live a little by riding on back of his motorcycle or how he plays basketball with Laser.  Yet in the end the movie treats him almost like a villain, essentially saying Nic and Jules family was perfect before he came around.  I found that outrageous, especially since the worst (and really only) bad thing he did was have sexual relations with Jules.  The sex was totally mutual and instigated by Jules (who is the one betraying a spouse and so is obviously the more guilty one), yet in the end the kids and Nic are madder at Paul.  That felt a little off and I would have at least liked an explanation.  And did Nic and Joni really never discuss how having a father figure seemed to be a good thing for the kids, or were they too selfish?  Or could the movie not handle the discussion without ending the movie with the message it wanted to end with.

Ultimately I think The Kids are All Right is a good movie, but no masterpiece.  The acting by Bening, Moore, and Ruffalo is excellent.  The dialogue and pace work well too.  And as a movie about marriage and its hardships, it’s also a winner.  The movie is light, the characters likeable, and there is room for thought afterward.  I just wish the movie had tackled its subject with a little more honesty.  Clearly the point of this movie was to show that two lesbians could raise a family just as well as any heterosexual couple, thru good times and bad.  That point would be stronger had they not ignored the idea of fathers in the lives of children, especially since this movie seems to show that it is good to have a father figure only to ignore that fact because it didn’t fit into writer/director Lisa Cholodenko’s PC message that lesbians can raise a family too.

The Kids Are All Right:  B

The Hangover (2009)

I didn’t expect much from The Hangover.  Of course the premise, about three guys who wake up after a crazy Las Vegas bachelor party with no memory of the prior night yet must find the missing groom in time for his wedding, had lots of potential to be hilarious.  It’s just that most the time Hollywood misses the mark with mainstream comedy.  I’m sorry, but Knocked Up and Wedding Crashers were about as funny as used toilet paper (maybe not even).  However, I was greatly surprised by The Hangover.

Todd Phillips is a director I would usually associate with bad Hollywood mainstream comedy, with the exception of Old School.  Now he can add another good film to his resume.  This movie gets a lot of laughs out of how bad one bachelor party can go.  And luckily, this party was uniquely outrageous.  The three main characters (played by Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms, and Zach Galifianakis) wake up to find their apartment thoroughly destroyed, a tiger in the bathroom, and a baby of unknown origin in the closet.  One of their crew, the groom (Justin Bartha), is missing.  They have very little time to find him before the wedding starts back in LA.  Of course as they discover clues, they discover more evidence of a seriously debauched night, which range from learning they are now in possession of a cop car to finding a naked Asian man in the trunk of the car they arrived to Las Vegas in.

Plot doesn’t really matter in this movie, it’s the laughs, which is how it should be for a comedy.  This movie has no stupid last half hour that turns dramatic.  The cast works well together, with possibly the exception of Justin Bartha even though he was barely in the movie.  He seemed boring and not funny at all; I was happy he was missing.  Supporting cast (like Heather Graham, Ken Jeong, and Mike Epps) all do an adequate job with their roles.

All in all, The Hangover is actually one of the best comedies of the year, if for no other reason than it wants nothing else but to be funny.

The Hangover:   B+