Madea Goes to Jail Movie Review
Madea Goes to Jail Review
"Madea Goes to Jail" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Tyler PerryProducer : Tyler Perry
Screenwiter : Tyler Perry
Starring : Tyler Perry,Derek Luke,Ion Overman,Keshia Knight Pulliam,RonReaco Lee,Tamela Mann,David Mann
For playwright and filmmaker Tyler Perry, the character of Mabel "Madea"
Simmons has always been his entertainment trump card, his anarchic ace in the
hole, so to speak. The loud-mouthed, gun-toting, pot-smoking grandma with a
wealth of attitude and a penchant for pop culture cross-references has always
been his audience window, his way for even the most jaded member of his revival
like crowd to connect to his "Go with God" morality tales.
Over the last few years, however, Perry (who plays the bossy battleaxe in full
blown comic drag) has tried to wean his fan base off of Madea. She was absent
from his last film (The Family that Preys) and had only a minor cameo in Meet
the Browns. But now she's back, and while Madea Goes to Jail is wholly
watchable, it's also an uneven experience.
After a childhood lost in the ghetto, Assistant District Attorney Joshua
Hardaway (Derek Luke) has become a successful attorney. He's also about to
marry his rich and well connected co-worker Linda (Ion Overman). While in
court, he runs into Candy (Keshia Knight Pulliam), a lifelong friend who has
ended up on the street as a prostitute. Feeling guilty for something that
happened while they were in college, he vows to help. Naturally, this doesn't
go over well with his snooty fiancé or nosy office Romeo Chuck (RonReaco Lee).
In the meantime, Madea (Perry) is also in hot water with the legal system.
After an incident in the K-Mart parking lot, she's back before the judge facing
five to ten, and not even her God-fearing daughter Cora (Tamela Mann) or
numbskull neighbor Brown (David Mann) can help.
Madea Goes to Jail wants to be too many things at one time. It wants to be a
heartfelt drama about second chances and forgiveness. It wants to be a
full-blooded Bible-thumping missive, discussing the positive effects a belief
in Jesus can have. It wants to show the struggles of life on the street. It
wants to talk about responsibility and dependability. And it wants to be an
uproarious comedy, our elderly heroine taking her "talk to the hand" mindset
from the courthouse to the big house. That he manages to make most of it work
is a testament to Perry's talent and the long hard road he traveled to success.
That Madea Goes to Jail sometimes falls flat is also the fault of this
overreaching approach.
Perry definitely plays best live. There, his combination of preaching and
pratfalls (along with some amazing gospel singing) becomes almost interactive,
the cast combining with the spectator to offer a shared experience. There are
times when this film tries for the same strategy, Madea simply rambling on,
awkward pauses planned to let the implied laughter die down before the next bit
of riffing occurs. Luckily, most of Perry's ad libs are very funny. But we do
sense a lack of editorial perception. Not everything Madea says is gold, and
yet the storyline will literally stop so we can hear the crazed crone go off
for no particular reason.
In many ways, Perry has never fully abandoned his roadshow ideal. He uses the
moments of manipulative "realism" as buffers between the burlesque. We do care
about Joshua and Candy, but their history is hindered by a lack of
completeness. Similarly, we want to see Linda get what's coming to her, but the
overtly bitchy quality of the character makes the comeuppance seem sedate, not
satisfying. While his actors never let him down, Perry is still trying to find
a cinematic consistency to his oeuvre. On stage, Madea makes even the most
mawkish, maudlin material work. Here, she's just a stopgap to Tyler Perry
advancing his motion picture prowess.
Bake me a cake with a file in it, will ya?
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Review by Bill Gibron
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