Tyler
Perry’s Back in Drag for Another Modern Morality Play
Madea
Goes to Jail
Rated PG-13 for
violence, sexual situations, mature themes and drug use.
Running time: 103 minutes
Studio: Lions Gate Films
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Excellent (4 stars)
Tyler
Perry is a master at making modern morality plays which
address an array of concerns of the African-American community.
What makes his films feel so authentic is that his characters
invariably reflect black culture in a manner which is instantly
recognizable and thus effortlessly resonates with the audience
as real. Another plus is Perry’s knowing how to mix-in plenty of
comic relief without diluting the power of the sobering message
he’s trying to deliver.
Loosely-based
on the stage production of the same name, Madea Goes to Jail
just might be Tyler Perry’s best endeavor to date. The film
stars Tyler, back in drag, as the sassy, pistol-packing Mable
“Madea” Simmons, heading a talented ensemble which includes
Viola Davis, Derek Luke, Ion Overman, Keisha Knight Pulliam and
David and Tamela J. Mann.
The cast also
features an incredible number of celebrity cameos, most notably,
Dr. Phil, and TV Judges Greg Mathis and Mablean Ephriam, not to
mention Reverend Al Sharpton, comedian Steve Harvey, DJs Tom
Joyner and Michael Baisden, CNN news anchor Tony Harris, and The
View talk show hosts Whoopi Goldberg, Joy Behar, Sherri Shepherd
and Elisabeth Hasselbeck. Fortunately, balancing all the egos
never gets in the way of making a hilarious flick, for the
finished product is a rollicking roller coaster that ought to be
fun for the whole family.
At the point of
departure, we find Madea in front of Judge Mablean who lets the
hell-raising granny off with a slap on the wrist and a stern
warning for leading police on a high-speed freeway chase.
Instead of landing behind bars, she is ordered to undergo
treatment for anger management with Dr. Phil. While on the
coach, she and the shrink engage in a hilarious exchange
reminiscent of Abbott and Costello’s classic “Who’s on First?”
Needless to
say, the therapy doesn’t work, and Madea goes berserk again when
a customer steals her parking spot at the mall. After wrecking
the woman’s car with a forklift, Madea is arrested again but
ends up this time in front of a very incensed Judge Mathis who
decides to teach her a lesson with a sentence of 5-10 years.
Meanwhile,
there’s a whole parallel plot unfolding involving Assistant
District Attorney Joshua Hardaway (Luke) who is engaged to Linda
(Overman), a bourgie colleague who doesn’t understand why he
might care about rehabilitating Candy (Pulliam), a former
girlfriend who has turned to streetwalking. With the help of a
prison minister (Davis), Josh does his best to get his ex the
help she needs anyway, a decision which destabilizes his once
solid relationship. Everything comes to a head when Madea and
Candy cross paths in a correctional facility, leading to tidy
resolution which not only ties loose ends but elicits a few
tears.
Remember to
stay for the closing credits, for some bonus badinage between
Madea and Dr. Phil.