Barbershop 2: Back in Business Movie Review
Barbershop 2: Back in Business Review

"Barbershop 2: Back in Business" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Kevin Rodney SullivanProducer : Matt Alvarez,George Tillman Jr.,Robert Teitel,Alex Gartner
Screenwiter : Don D. Scott
Starring : Ice Cube,Cedric the Entertainer,Garcelle Beauvais,Queen Latifah,Eve
The first Barbershop was a pleasant surprise, an easygoing comedy that had its
ear turned toward the community and its heart in the right place. The sequel
doesn’t surprise us – we know what to expect by now – but that doesn’t make the
visit any less pleasant.
Because movies are filmed months in advance, though, the topics tackled in the
barbershop’s open forum are dated. Rants regarding the D.C. sniper and Bill
Clinton might have fit better in the first film, which came out two years ago.
The old material eventually gives way to new challenges for barbershop owner
Calvin Palmer (Ice Cube) and his faithful crew of haircutters.
Quality Land Development promises change to Calvin’s Chicago neighborhood. The
company is buying up established businesses to make room for a Kinko’s, a
Starbucks, and a Blockbuster. Calvin doesn’t mind change, but balks when a
Nappy Kutz, the SuperCuts of black hairstyles, moves in across the street. How
can Calvin compete?
Barbershop 2 answers that dilemma and improves on its predecessor in the
process. It’s smarter, funnier and doesn’t need to pause every fifteen minutes
to make way for a slapstick ATM heist. Ice Cube almost helps us forget the
debacle that was last month’s Torque. Even Eve, so one-note in the first film,
gets to bat around an emotion or two this time out.
Don D. Scott, who helped write the first Barbershop, drops us right back in the
film’s natural flow. The sequel upgrades in the director’s chair with the
hiring of Kevin Rodney Sullivan (How Stella Got Her Groove Back), a competent
storyteller with a knack for guiding an ensemble cast.
Barbershop 2 doesn’t take a little off the top but lets its vibe grow out,
which allows for deeper character development, interesting subplots and a
worthy backstory for the franchise’s most engaging character, Eddie (Cedric the
Entertainer). Flashbacks explain how he found a safe haven in the barbershop
back in the 1960s. He witnessed turning points in America’s social history
through the shop’s front window – even participated in a few indirectly.
While Eddie looks back, Barbershop 2 looks forward. Queen Latifah introduces us
to Gina, the head of a neighboring beauty shop. Her comedic tirades lay the
groundwork for a spin-off movie, Beauty Shop, which is scheduled to hit
theaters later this year.
Deleted scenes, outtake, and two commentary tracks are foremost among the ton
of extras on this DVD release. Recommended.
Someone's gettin' a perm!
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





