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Annoying couples abound in tedious movie

Fri Oct 12, 2007 6:26pm EDT
Actress and singer Janet Jackson poses with Tyler Perry, who co-starred, wrote and directed their new film ''Why Did I Get Married?'' at the film's premiere in Hollywood, California October 4, 2007. REUTERS/Fred Prouser

By Frank Scheck

Film

NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - Where's Madea when you need her? Certainly, the quartet of married couples at the center of Tyler Perry's new comedy-drama could use some of the tough love dosed out by the filmmaker's female alter ego.

The characters in "Why Did I Get Married?" -- displaying a series of marital dysfunctions that would fill a dozen episodes of "Oprah" -- make for unpleasant company over the course of two long hours. The film opened Friday, naturally without being screened for the press.

Working in a similar if slightly more comedic mode to Perry's most recent effort, "Daddy's Little Girls," the film is set during a vacation retreat in wintry Colorado undertaken by four married couples. These annual sojourns are at the instigation of best-selling pop psychologist Patricia (Janet Jackson, making her first big-screen appearance in years), whose own marriage to architect Gavin (Malik Yoba) is strained because of the recent death of their young son in an automobile accident.

The other couples taking part are workaholic lawyer Dianne (Sharon Leal) and her neglected and resentful husband Terry (Perry); the hard-drinking, combative Angela (Tasha Smith) and her loving but cowed husband Marcus (Michael Jai White), who's trying to keep secret his recently acquired STD; and the sweet but overweight Sheila (singer Jill Scott) and her verbally abusive husband Mike (Richard T. Jones).

Actually, Sheila is somewhat late to the party because she was forced to drive after being kicked off an airplane because of her excessive girth. Mike has gone ahead, accompanied by her sexy best friend Trina (Denise Boutte), with whom he's not so secretly carrying on an affair.

The combustible group soon lets the fireworks fly, with secrets bared and simmering tensions unleashed. By the end of the trip, the couples have mostly dealt with their differences and Sheila has found true love with an impossibly perfect, handsome policeman (Lamman Rucker).

As has been previously demonstrated in the hugely successful Perry's stage, television and big-screen works, subtlety and tonal consistency are not his strong suits. Here, the mostly broadly drawn characters (including a pair of flaming gay queens toting a poodle) and situations on display quickly prove grating, with the film veering awkwardly between broad comedy and melodrama.

The performers don't fare well under the circumstances, with most laboring under the weight of their characters' stereotypical attributes. Scott comes off the best, providing a real sweetness and vulnerability to the wounded Sheila, while Jackson, not really given much to do, barely manages to make an impression.

Of course, none of these flaws will matter much to Perry's devoted audiences, whose support has enabled him to virtually build a media empire. But again, it's hard not to wish that Madea had been around early in the proceedings to slap these annoying characters into submission.

Cast:

Terry: Tyler Perry

Dianne: Sharon Leal

Patricia: Janet Jackson

Gavin: Malik Yoba

Sheila: Jill Scott

Mike: Richard T. Jones

Angela: Tasha Smith

Marcus: Michael Jai White

Trina: Denise Boutte

Troy: Lamman Rucker

Director-screenwriter: Tyler Perry; Producers: Tyler Perry, Reuben Cannon; Director of photography: Toyomichi Kurita; Production designer; Ina Mayhew; Music supervisor: Joel C. High; Co-producers: Roger M. Bobb, Joe Genier; Costume designer: Keith G. Lewis; Editor: Maysie Hoy.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter



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