Head of State Movie Review
Head of State Review

"Head of State" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Chris RockProducer : Ali Leroi,Michael Rotenberg,Chris Rock
Screenwiter : Ali Leroi,Chris Rock
Starring : Chris Rock,Bernie Mac,Dylan Baker,Robin Givens,James Rebhorn
There’s a chance Al Gore might have wrestled the presidency from George W. Bush
in 2000 if he could’ve mustered 1/100th of the charisma and common sense Chris
Rock displays as politician-for-the-people Mays Gilliam in Head of State. An
alderman serving the toughest neighborhood in Washington, D.C., Gilliam is
selected by an unidentified liberal party to run for president when their
candidate dies in a plane crash. The political pundits know Gilliam’s chances
are slim, but they hope he’ll attract minority support so their frontrunner (a
well-cast James Rebhorn) can cruise to victory in 2008.
Once on the campaign trail, though, Gilliam discovers that he’s in tune with
the people and ready to be the country’s next leader. Encouraged by his brother
(Bernie Mac) to speak his mind, Gilliam climbs the public opinion polls, courts
a headstrong hottie from his ‘hood (Tamala Jones), and puts a scare into his
opponent – the incumbent Vice President (Nick Searcy) who keeps reminding us he’
s “a war hero and Sharon Stone’s cousin.”
Political campaigns are not sprints to the finish line. They’re drawn out
marathons that slowly build support one vote at a time. Such is the case with
State, which takes extremely sloppy (and silly) first steps out of the ballot
box but finds its stride one broad joke after another. Crass skits and the
presence of a screeching Robin Givens almost bury State before it can state its
case, but thankfully, Rock and co-screenwriter Ali LeRoi save their best
material for the campaign, when State’s anonymous political party morphs into
an old school house party, electric slide and all.
Making his directorial debut, Rock slips in a number of gut-busting visual gags
that catch us off-guard. They last but 5 seconds, and include a repetitive
assassination scenario and a glimpse at a training camp for presidential
whores. The most inspired, though, involves voter turnout for California’s
Caucasian population.
Such silliness needs grounding, and Rock recruits a solid supporting cast for
the task. Before State can succumb to Sandler-esque pockets of juvenile humor,
stoic and steadfast turns by Dylan Baker and Lynn Whitfield (playing campaign
advisors) steer the boat back to calmer waters. However, Rock wisely balances
their natural conservatism with a return of the Mac in the film’s second half,
who agrees to be Gilliam’s running mate. Mac instantly increases the energy
flow onscreen. He’s a force of nature, a rush of wind that blows the dust off
this record and gives it a beat.
State does struggle to milk its main joke for 90 minutes, as some scenes scream
of filler. A pre-debate fistfight and a sweet but superfluous puppy-dog
courtship kill time between Rock’s rants from the presidential podium. It’s
here that the comedian plays to his strengths, building his character’s
political platform with sharp social commentary typical of Rock's stand-up
routines. God help us, he even makes a number of relevant points. The Democrats
could do worse in 2004.
It’s a backhanded compliment, considering Rock’s laundry list of cinematic duds
(Pootie Tang, anyone?), but the SNL veteran has succeeded in State where
countless others have failed. And he finally directed a funny “Chris Rock”
movie, the sharpest one to date.
DVD features an "outrageous" commentary by Rock (not really that outrageous)
plus a handful of deleted scenes and making-of bits.
Rock on, Mr. President.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





