Shaft (2000) Movie Review
Shaft (2000) Review

"Shaft (2000)" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : John SingletonProducer : Scott Rudin,John Singleton
Screenwiter : Richard Price
Starring Samuel L Jackson, Vanessa Williams, Jeffrey Wright, Christian Bale, Dan Hedaya, Busta Rhymes, Toni Collette, Richard Roundtree
Who's the bad mutha -- shut yo mouth!
That's right. Just talkin' 'bout Shaft. The remake. Er, the sequel that is
-- in what might very well be the first and only time a sequel has been given
the same title as the original. And believe me, that's just where the
stupidity of Shaft begins.
Samuel L. Jackson is obvious casting for the role of John Shaft, the nephew of
that other John Shaft (Richard Roundtree), the man who popularized New York's
baddest cop in three films during the early 1970s. While John Shaft is
certainly a piece of pop culture, it's also important to remember that the
Shaft films were little more than classic examples of blaxploitation. And the
Shaft of today does embarrassingly little to change his image.
It's a pity, because the update could have been a lot of fun -- a modern-day
John Shaft as tragic hero in a corrupt and oppressive NYPD. Alas, no, the
movie degenerates after 10 minutes of foot-tapping to Isaac Hayes' classic
"Theme from Shaft," with the audience left merely to wonder: How long it will
be until Roundtree makes his obligatory cameo? (Answer: about 30 minutes.)
he plot, what there is of one, is an utter throwaway. Involving a rich yuppie
psycho (American Psycho's Christian Bale, now making a living playing rich
yuppie psychos) who bludgeons a black man to death -- and the hush scheme to
silence the only witness (Toni Collette) -- Shaft is so derivative as to be
laughable, if only it didn't take itself so seriously. With Shaft's ridiculous
beard trim, a joke-busting sidekick (fittingly played by Busta Rhymes, the only
real treat in the film), and a whole army of bad guys, none of whom can shoot
worth a damn (though Shaft never misses), Shaft is a parody of itself but
doesn't even realize it. Ultimately, the story serves simply to usher Shaft
from fight to gun battle to car chase, over and over and over again. If it
wasn't called Shaft, no one would see this film.
I tell you what. Let Spike Lee direct Shaft instead of blood-happy John
Singleton. Hell, let Spike Lee direct and star! Now that'd be a movie. But
what am I saying? Shut yo mouth!
Just shootin' wit' Shaft.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





