The Cookout Movie Review
The Cookout Review

"The Cookout" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Lance RiveraProducer : Shakim Compere,Queen Latifah,Daryl French,Otis Best
Screenwiter : Laurie B. Turner,Ramsey Gbelawoe,Jeffery B. Holmes
Starring : Quran Pender,Meagan Goode,Danny Golver,Farrah Fawcett,Ja Rule,Eve,Jenifer Lewis,Jonathan Silverman,Queen Latifah
About five minutes into The Cookout, a pair of reporters quizzes first-round
NBA pick Todd Anderson (Quran Pender) on how it was like to come up from the
ghetto. Anderson tells the reporters that he’s lived in the same suburban house
all of his life, and that his family has raised him well -- that his life hasn’
t been all hard knocks and thug life. At that moment I discovered two things
about The Cookout. Number one: It was going to make some important social
statements in a low key way. Number two: It wasn’t going to be a funny movie.
The Cookout is a comedy-drama about a ton of interesting social dynamics: About
the potential backlash of instant fame and fortune (and the resulting
intra-urban pressure not to succeed), about the endless small stereotypes that
white people make about black people (and the endless small stereotypes that
black people make about white people), and about the need for people, black or
white, to be true to themselves.
But it’s not funny. At all.
Blame the writers. Blame the producers. Blame the overdrawn characters, but I
haven’t seen a comedy with so much intelligence and so little humor since,
well, the last four Woody Allen movies.
The idea of a family cookout and getting in touch with yourself over the span
of six hours with more cholesterol than Super Size Me has definitely been here
before, and will be here again, but The Cookout can’t grill up a laugh or two
in it’s hour and a half running time. Instead we get to watch a movie that
makes a bunch of really quality social statements in an overdrawn package.
Despite The Cookout’s obvious intention to get the world to be color blind, it
paints all of its stereotypes in black and white. The black stereotypes are:
There’s the paranoid black man (Tim Meadows), the cooky security guard who
really wants to be a real cop (Latifah), the gold digger girlfriend (Meagan
Good), the ghetto punk (Ja Rule), the stoner twins who eat two many muchies
(Kevin Phillips plays both of them), and the black man who has become so
whipped by Farrah Fawcett that he’s become white inside (Danny Glover). On the
white side there’s the semi-slimy agent (Jonathan Silverman) and the uptight
advertising executive who really just wants to break free.
Personally, I’m going to take a cue from the Ladies Man and blame it on the
white man. The dry humor, uninspired cardboard cutouts of characters and
overused jokes that appear in every other movie reek of being the work of
script doctors, and the three screenwriters with names like Laurie B. Turner,
Ramsey Gbelawoe, and Jeffery B. Holmes (contrasted with the story credits,
Queen Latifah, Shakim Compere, and Darryl “Latee” French) make me think that
what started out as a perfectly good script got sent past a few Valley focus
groups and turned into a lowfat feast of stereotypes.
The Cookout is overdrawn and unfunny, but it has a heart of gold and a solid
message. If studios stopped watering down the films substance like the whiskey
of a recovering alcoholic then it might have actually ended up being a film I
could safely recommend. As it stands, The Cookout is the dehydrated food at the
end of the summer season: It might fill you up, but you’re not gonna like the
way it tastes.
Cookin' out and about.
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Review by James Brundage
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