Deliver Us from Eva Movie Review
Deliver Us from Eva Review

"Deliver Us from Eva" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Gary HardwickProducer : Scott Greenstein,Paddy Cullen,Paula Weinstein,Writer
Screenwiter : Gary Hardwick,Barbara Brauner,James Mattson
Starring : Gabrielle Union,LL Cool J,Essence Atkins,Robinne Lee,Meagan Good
Red flags of caution should shoot up any time the strongest actor in an
ensemble comedy is a former rap star with a Halloween sequel and the
critically-panned remake of Rollerball on his resume. Still, LL Cool J stands
apart in the relationship farce Deliver Us from Eva, and his chemistry with
love interest Gabrielle Union lifts this dreadful dud out of the doldrums but
can’t keep it afloat.
Headstrong Eva (Union) repeatedly interferes in her three sisters’ romantic
relationships. Hoping to get her off their collective cases, three frustrated
friends hire ladies man James (LL Cool J) to seduce the manipulative minx. But
James and Eva fall in love despite their obvious differences, and everyone
comes to discover that a satisfied Eva causes more problems than an irritated
one.
Poorly edited and intentionally mean-spirited, Eva casts indistinguishable
actors in featureless roles, giving us no one to care for. The men are selfish
and needy, the women incapable of forming their own thoughts. Using everyday,
interchangeable character molds (from the oversexed male to the flamboyantly
homosexual hair stylist), Eva strips gender stereotypes to their ugly cores.
Individual strength, seen only in Eva, is rewarded by distrust. The film’s most
powerful female isn’t really authoritative, but rather comes off as
manipulative, frightening and hated. Simple greed motivates the rest of the
characters, as James is paid $5,000 to win Eva’s heart, and the buddies who
hire him mainly want their share of a family trust fund the sisters share.
Union and Cool J do manage to connect in numerous quiet scenes, and their union
(no pun intended) is worth watching. The film’s half-hearted attempts at giving
Eva depth, which occur only after she opens her doors to James, work only
because Union is talented enough to sell it. A better script for these two
exists, but it’s not this vile pile of stereotypical trash.
It’s almost unfair to rip into the insufferable Eva. This one’s so bad, it
exists on a whole new level of failure.
And give us this day our daily braids.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





