A collection of endeared stars align curbside on this poster for Tim Story's Barbershop |
Calvin is a dreamer, but his dreams cost money, and therefore the barbershop that he has inherited from his father is nearly bankrupt. Now he decides to sell it, - but is that the right decision?
Barbershop is written by Mark Brown (The Salon (2005)), Don D. Scott (House Party: Tonight's the Night (2013, video)) and Marshall Todd (Woke (2020, TV-series)) and directed by Tim Story (One of Us Tripped (1997)).
Ice Cube (Ride Along (2014)) is pretty good as Calvin, and Anthony Anderson ('Til Death (2006-07)) has comedic chops, - but unfortunately he is mostly tasked with yelling in Barbershop. The same type of problem goes for Eve (Flashbacks of a Fool (2008)), who doesn't seem to be doing anything at her job besides hollering aloud about apple juice and other matters.
Cedric the Entertainer (Dance Fu (2011))'s character is a tiring know-it-all who talks incessantly; and similarly to the film's languid story, he moves around in grounds that are very close to self-parody while often dripping more or less truthful 'wisdom' into the mortar.
The major problem for the plot in Barbershop is that Calvin is dead tired of his shop, - SPOILER but then changes his mind about it anyway. Where the new-found realization comes from on this apparently normal day in the small chatterbox that we look in on is a mystery. The staff soon becomes extremely tiring for the audience as well (as they are for Calvin), and it is involuntarily funny how very few customers the barbers have, and how exceedingly rarely they seem to actually get paid in proper money. - What kind of a business is this? ...
Watch a 2-minute clip from the film here
Cost: 12 mil. $
Box office: 77 mil. $
= Huge hit (returned 6.41 times its cost)
[Barbershop premiered 7 August (USA) and runs 102 minutes. Shooting took place in Chicago, Illinois from ? - January 2002. The film opened #1 to a 20.6 mil. $ first weekend in North America, where it was #1 for a second weekend and then spent another 2 weekends in the top 5 (#3-#5), grossing 75.7 mil. $ (98.3 % of the total gross). The 2nd and 3rd biggest markets were the UK with 230k $ (0.3 %) and New Zealand with 51k $ (0.07 %). Roger Ebert gave the film a 3/4 star review, translating to 2 notches higher than this one. The film spun a franchise; the first sequel was Barbershop 2: Back in Business (2004), and after that came a spin-off, a TV-series and in 2014 a second sequel. Story returned with Taxi (2004). Cube returned in The Bernie Mack Show (2002, TV-series) and theatrically in Friday After Next (2002). Barbershop is certified fresh at 83 % with a 6.59/10 critical average at Rotten Tomatoes.]
What do you think of Barbershop?
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