"Madea Goes to Jail"

Discussion in 'In the Media' started by Howiedoit, Feb 27, 2009.

  1. Howiedoit

    Howiedoit Active Member

    Typical Tyler Perry, it was ok but I had one small problem with it.









    Spoiler Alert!!!!







    One of the characters is an Assistant Attorney who is about to get married to another successful lawyer unfortunately he decides to throw the relationship out the window to help a hooker.

    I think Tyler Perry has a problem with the middle class.
     
  2. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    I saw it and it is all good. It has made money,#1 last week. The light skinned woman who played a mistress in the first Madea movie plays the lawyer. That is Perry's genre and it works. I read he wanted to kill off Madea but, it is the goose that lays the golden egg. Black women identify with the character. Also, his other characters are hilarious.
     
  3. malikom

    malikom Banned

    corny movie
     
  4. GFunk

    GFunk Well-Known Member

    Looks unfunny to me, but I find damn near all of his shit unfunny.
     
  5. veema

    veema Member

    What's So Funny About Madea? Nothing.


    [​IMG]


    Tyler Perry's fans see nothing wrong with his comic depiction of a large black woman in "Madea Goes to Jail." (By Alfeo Dixon -- Lionsgate)
    [​IMG]



    By Courtland Milloy
    Wednesday, February 25, 2009; Page B01

    I went to see the Tyler Perry movie "Madea Goes to Jail," in which Perry plays a wise-cracking black grandmother, Madea, short for "Mother Dear" and ebonically pronounced "muh deah." With an extensive criminal past that includes "supersize stripper," attempted murderer and check fraud artist, Madea is a near-cult figure among many African Americans, especially women. Thanks in large part to them, Perry's comedic creation debuted as the No. 1 movie in America over the weekend, raking in $41 million and 34 percent of the weekend moviegoing audience, according to box-office tracker Exhibitor Relations.

    At the AMC Magic Johnson Capital Centre 12 in Landover, where Madea is being shown 14 times a day, I was hoping to get a clue as to why this man in drag is so popular. And with the movie featuring guest appearances by Whoopi Goldberg, Dr. Phil, Judge Mathis and Al Sharpton, perhaps I'd even get in a laugh or two.

    Boy, was I wrong -- on both counts.

    All around me you could almost hear the funny bones cracking -- deep guttural laughter coming not only from kids in the audience but from my peers in the AARP set, as well.


    And there I sat, silently ranting: There is nothing funny about this black man in pantyhose. And where is all of this cross-dressing-black-man stuff coming from, anyway? First, comedians Eddie Murphy and Martin Lawrence star in high-grossing movies as the fattest, ugliest black women that Hollywood makeup artists can conjure up, and now here's Perry with his gussied-up version of the same butt of the joke. By the way, I don't want to hear diddly about Robin Williams as Mrs. Doubtfire or Milton Berle in high heels. Having a black man play super mammy is not the same thing. Perhaps it would be were it not for America's perverse, systemic and centuries-long efforts to humiliate African men and women and turn them into slaves.

    The only good a Madea movie could possibly do would be to remind us that the scars of oppression are deep and enduring, often operating below the level of consciousness, then breaking out in the most bizarre manifestation of self-hate and self-sabotage, including pathetic images on the big screen.

    Of course, Perry's fans don't see it that way. When I asked some women in the theater if they were at all uneasy about Perry in wigs, lipstick and rouge, they clucked tongues and rolled eyes in a manner that Madea her/himself would no doubt approve.

    "Oh, please," snapped Darlene Johnson, 51. "It's just comedy."

    Yeah, and misogynistic gansta rap is just music.

    Said Sheena Young, also 51: "He's just multitasking. His initial budget didn't allow for him to hire all the people he needed so he played them himself. It's awesome."

    I'm not taking away anything from the 39-year-old Perry's resourcefulness and ingenuity. He pulled himself up by the bootstraps from a low-income household in New Orleans, started writing and putting on stage plays about Madea (supposedly a composite of women in his life) and went on to become one of the most successful filmmakers in America. He has a beautiful home and his own studios in Atlanta. He hires lots of young black actors and production personnel and makes considerable contributions to worthy causes.

    He is awesome.
    It's just that his movies are awful.

    Here's a typical scene:
    Madea's brother, Uncle Joe, also played by Perry, is a crusty old coot who breathes with the aid of an oxygen tank while smoking marijuana throughout the movie (he even wears a bong around his neck). Madea, ever the boss woman, scolds him mercilessly about the dangers of mixing fire and oxygen. And -- here's where the audience howls -- as Madea waddles past, her behind wide as a doorway, Uncle Joe cracks: "King Kong ain't got nothing on her."

    How'd you like to see that on a movie marquee: Madea the black woman as King Kong? That's about as funny, say, as a dead monkey cartoon from the New York Post?

    It's not a sign of respect but one of disdain to portray black women as some updated Jemima (that's what a white character in the movie calls her) from the antebellum South. Sure, all of Perry's fans claim to know someone like Madea. But in truth, we know nothing -- only that she is aging and irrationally angry, existing to clean up everybody's else's mess, a linebacker of a house servant whose unmet emotional needs remain a mystery even to the great Dr. Phil himself.

    We may laugh at her, but the joke is on us.

    E-mail: milloyc@washpost.com
     
  6. hntr18

    hntr18 Well-Known Member

    that was fucking halirious i saw it like 2 to 3 weeks ago
     
  7. fly girl

    fly girl Well-Known Member

    How old is the person who wrote that review (Courtland Milroy)? How can he speak of black men in drag and not mention Geraldine?

    [youtube]<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/tcbn0K84ZdE&hl=en&fs=1&color1=0xcc2550&color2=0xe87a9f"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/tcbn0K84ZdE&hl=en&fs=1&color1=0xcc2550&color2=0xe87a9f" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>[/youtube]

    Or even Jamie Foxx as Wanda?

    [youtube]<object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/dwn3BfhaBqE&hl=en&fs=1&color1=0xcc2550&color2=0xe87a9f"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/dwn3BfhaBqE&hl=en&fs=1&color1=0xcc2550&color2=0xe87a9f" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object>[/youtube]
     
  8. mike38

    mike38 New Member

    The Medea series is just flat out corny and not very amusing. And don't even think of comparing this to the Wanda and Geraldine characters, since both of them were groundbreaking, while the Medea is simply isn't.
     
  9. LA

    LA Well-Known Member

    Didn't like this movie.
     
  10. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    It is #1 again this weekend. It has legs and the fan base is strong.
     
  11. satyricon

    satyricon Guest

    I actually purchased a ticket for it, but watched something else. I don't plan on seeing it, but if it encourages Hollywood to support better black film . . .
     
  12. Howiedoit

    Howiedoit Active Member

    I agree, but I believe Hollywood has a distain for Tyler Perry 2 weeks in a row "Madea Goes to Jail" has been number one. Now, here where the suits in Hollywood will try to copy by putting a black man in a Fat Suit and act a fool.

    If the Madea character was real she would be either dead or really in jail for a long time.

    Note to black women: Please do not copy this character
     
  13. Intriguedone

    Intriguedone Well-Known Member

    :smt011Damn, with critics like ourselves, who the hell needs enemies?

    This is some str8 bullshit.

    For years all we got was hood'movies - and we complained.

    We got lame-ass supporting roles and killed off early - and we complained.

    We've been pigeon-holed into stereotypical roles - and we complained.

    WTF do we want?

    Here's a brother who writes, produces, and OWNS his own studios in ATLANTA (AKA, The Black Mecca).

    He's helped to grow an industry in a market where Hollywood has had a small presence.

    He's provided jobs for GREAT minority actors who consistentely get overlooked by the mainstream due to their complexion.

    He's providing jobs for studio personnel.

    ....GET IT? HE'S CREATING JOBS AND OPPORTUNITY!!!

    Now if you just don't find his movies entertaining...so be it. A few were lackluster. However, to criticize him because of his characters is ridiculous. Just about every black person can relate to Madea, like it or not. You've got somebody in your family who has some of the same traits. SO WHAT?!

    It's funny as hell!

    We don't criticize Italians for Mob Movies.

    We don't criticize the mainstream for perpetuating the objectification of white females and their artificial standard of beauty. Hell, IT'S CELEBRATED ON THIS VERY FORUM (See Men's Locker Room - of which I personally enjoy as well!)

    However, we're so quick to put down a 'Tyler Perry'.....it just fuggin' amazes me.

    His movies are generally family friendly, promote spiritual themes, examines real life situations with comedy as the sideshow.

    WHAT'S THE FUGGIN' COMPLAINT?!

    Black folks have a disease - Neversatisfieditis perpetuated by psychocrabmentalityitis.


    :smt024...Anyway, the movie could've been funnier, but it was still entertaining. Worth going to see.

    'Why did I get married' is still his best film.
     
  14. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    Intriguedone, I wished there is a Tyler Perry in the IR front.
     
  15. Intriguedone

    Intriguedone Well-Known Member

    :cool: I'd support that bruh!!
     
  16. tbron

    tbron New Member

    i hate his other movies but i liked this one.
     
  17. Soulthinker

    Soulthinker Well-Known Member

    I,the IR movies I love the most is when the brother express his love to his mate of another race or nationality more freely. Some are made for tv or for the big screen. Whatever,the method I praise those filmmakers of gave the effort in spite of what Hollywood or others in the movie business thinks.
     

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