Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins (2008)
Facts
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Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins (Widescreen)
DVD Price: You save 35%! As of Nov 20 2:00 EST (details)
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| Cast | Martin Lawrence, James Earl Jones, Margaret Avery, Nicole Ari Parker, Mike Epps, Michael Clarke Duncan and Cedric The Entertainer |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2007 |
| DVD Release | June 17, 2008 |
| Running Time | 114 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) |
| UPC Code | 025195015875 |
| Buy this item | $19.49 at Amazon.com As of Nov 20 2:00 EST (details) 1 DVD, Universal, Usually ships in 24 hours, AC-3, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 5.1), English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), French (Dubbed - Dolby Digital 5.1) |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins - Review |
| 3.5--Going home is not always a vacation.... |
Roscoe (Martin Lawrence), is a talk show host who is depicted as a decent but ambitious man who revels in the celebrity life he shares with his fiancé, Bianca Kittles (Joy Bryant). As a winner of the television show, "Survival," Bianca has transferred all the driven, maniacal aspects of her personality needed for that win to her day-to-day life. In a very L.A. sort of way, not seen on screen since perhaps Robin Givens played several roles as a Black man eater, Bianca keeps her world on a tight leash of accomplishment. She knows exactly what she wants, how she is going to get it and what is clearly unacceptable in her realm of the high life.
Sure, Bianca's depiction is extreme--women are sort of thrown under the bus in this one--but the men don't come off looking much better. Martin Lawrence, Mike Epps and Cedric the Entertainer compete with Mo'Nique to be the sorriest and funniest of them all when they all gather in the South for a wedding anniversary celebration for Roscoe's parents. Down home, the successful Roscoe finds himself at the center of the, by now, stock story of the rich Black relative who comes home and has to deal with his relatives who are either ghetto (Mo'Nique), country (Cedric the Entertainer), broke and/or walking around with a loose screw (Mike Epps). The ways that the dysfunctional rich fit perfectly into this odd stew help to make this film funny in surprising ways. Another thing that works is the individual funny that each comedian brings to their role.
The final element that "Roscoe" has going for it is the fact that, unlike some movies, its storyline is not laughable. It actually makes sense and, despite the comedy, the script makes all the characters very human--flawed, but human. There is even some romance thrown into the mix that allows Nicole Ari Parker to once again play the role of the sweetheart. At the corners of ruckus--the obstacle course competitions, the predictable slapstick and overwrought throw-downs--the movie sets aside a few minutes to showcase rowdy exchanges among the veteran comics, passed through a PG-13 filter. Recommend to fans of the likes of this genre.
September 18, 2008
| Funny, but flawed |
I found this film amusing. I particularly liked Mo'Nique as his sister, and the scenes of his relatives on his television show in the credits. There were some cliche elements I could've done without such as the country mouse cliche (Roscoe became a big star, becomes egotistical materialistic etc.) Also the glories of finding true love with your high school sweetheart. *Yawns* These tropes are done to death in films.
There is a little grossness, mostly in the forms of fake and kind of silly dog fornication. (Between his girlfriend's pomeranian and a golden retriever), and suggestive themes. Not for small kids, but teens have probably seen worse. September 8, 2008
| WELCOME HOME ROSCOE JENKINS |
| Decent But Definitely Not Hilarious |
Someone needs to tell Monique that saying something stupid loudly doesn't make it funny. Her big mouth overshadowed the content of every scene. She seems like a beautiful person, but that is not the issue. (Shouting "How was your weekend?" to my asian drycleaner won't make him say "Fine. And you," instead he nods and half says "Yeah, Thank you.")
If you have nothing better to do, it is worth a watch. Martin and Ced are funny until they stop acting like comedians. Epps has gotten funnier. And there are several nice cleavage shots. August 21, 2008
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