Movie Review

Barbershop (2002)

EW's GRADE
B-

Details Release Date: Sep 13, 2002; Rated: PG-13; Length: 102 Minutes; Genres: Comedy, Drama; With: Ice Cube; More

 THE BIG CLIPPER As \'\'Barbershop\'\'\'s owner, Ice Cube is fit to trim Barbershop, Ice Cube
THE BIG CLIPPER As ''Barbershop'''s owner, Ice Cube is fit to trim

All About

Barbershop

Get the latest photos, news, and more

The African-American staff and customers who populate the tonsorial parlor owned by Calvin Palmer (Ice Cube) in the eager-to-entertain, conservative comedy Barbershop are denizens of present-day South Side Chicago. But sometimes, when the light hits just right in this reassuring, retro uplifter, the clock seems to tick backward to the 1950s, when a man armed with nothing more persuasive than a good shave and a haircut could make something of himself.

The kind of blue-chip values promoted here are nothing new to audiences of ''Soul Food'' and ''Men of Honor'' -- crime doesn't pay; treat your women right; and love your neighbor (including the Indian shopkeeper down the street). And the plot is one of straight-up, be-true-to-your-roots responsibility, in which Calvin, who inherited the business from his late father and feels stifled by its squareness, first decides to sell the place to a local loan shark, then decides otherwise. The earnestness is leavened, however, by some of the airy funkiness of Cube's earlier ''Friday'' comedies. And the mixed-up rhythms of the story rescue ''Barbershop'' from bland goodness.

While an effervescent Cedric the Entertainer (hair poufed and parted in a big Frederick Douglass 'do) dominates the proceedings as the shop's senior philosopher/kibitzer, riffing zestfully about Rodney King, O.J. Simpson, and Rosa Parks, rap star Eve wields clippers as the only woman in the shop; ''Save the Last Dance'''s Sean Patrick Thomas plays a highfalutin college student cutting hair to pay tuition; and Troy Garity fascinates as Isaac Rosenberg, a white barber who lives black, from his fly girlfriend to his wardrobe. As it does for many young white men, the racial crossover represents a kind of personal revolution for Isaac. Then again, for Garity, the actor son of Jane Fonda and Tom Hayden, revolution is a family affair.

Originally posted Sep 10, 2002 Published in issue #673 Sep 20, 2002 Order article reprints
You Might Also Like

Add your comment

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. An asterisk * indicates a required field.

500 characters remaining
Advertisement