Norbit

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Critics' Reviews

Metascore
®
27
Generally Unfavorable Reviews
out of 100
'Norbit' Is Retread City
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Few visual effects are as special as Rick Baker's makeup for Eddie Murphy's comedies. Whether he's aging Murphy in "Life," or providing convincing flesh to fill out fat suits in the "Nutty Professor" comedies, Baker always makes something of the collaboration.

The first "Nutty Professor" (1996) won an Oscar for Baker's contribution and a National Society of Film Critics' prize for Murphy's performance as several members of the same family. It remains a tour-de-force for both men, as well as an early indication of the versatility that would finally earn an Oscar nomination for Murphy in "Dreamgirls."

Unfortunately, the more Murphy and Baker work together, the more desperate and derivative their scripts appear. Have they just become more interested in achieving effects than in telling stories? It's still fun to watch Murphy disappear into wildly different characters in their latest collaboration, "Norbit," but the movie lacks momentum and seems to end about a dozen times.

Murphy plays three major roles. He's most appealing as nerdy, confidence-deprived Norbit, who never fell out of love with his childhood sweetheart, Kate (Thandie Newton), a girl he met at the Golden WonTon Restaurant and Orphanage. Murphy also plays Norbit's adoptive father, Mr. Wong, and Norbit's large and monstrously selfish wife, Rasputia.

With her lethally long fingernails and pounds of raging flesh that refuse to fit into even a queen-size bathing suit, Rasputia is a nightmare vision who might have been dreamed up by Fellini during an especially restless night. Still, she's never as funny as she's clearly intended to be. Perhaps that has something to do with her source.

Murphy and his brother, Charles, were inspired to write the script after watching Internet footage of a married couple having a street fight. They were shocked by the wife's domination of her husband. In Eddie's words, the movie is "about that battered husband."

It's an interesting notion for a comedy, but the Murphys fail to follow through and carry the idea to any kind of logical conclusion. They turned over the script to the writing team of David Ronn and Jay Scherick, who previously paired up for remakes of "I Spy" and "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner." The lightweight director, Brian Robbins, did last year's lame Tim Allen remake of "The Shaggy Dog."

The result, not surprisingly, plays like Retread City, with Eddie Murphy once more using a fat suit to milk laughs. Rasputia never becomes much more than a walking sight gag; she's not remotely threatening as a dominatrix. Norbit's struggle to assert himself is so formulaic that the movie seems to stop whenever it pays attention to him. Mr. Wong never comes into focus.

It's painful to watch Cuba Gooding Jr. wasting his time in the cardboard role of Kate's con-artist boyfriend. Newton visibly struggles to add weight to her character, who is even less substantial than the runaway wife she recently played in "The Pursuit of Happyness." Why not cast Murphy in these roles as well? The novelty value might make them marginally more entertaining.

More movies on MSNBC 

Few visual effects are as special as Rick Baker's makeup for Eddie Murphy's comedies. Whether he's aging Murphy in "Life," or providing convincing flesh to fill out fat suits in the "Nutty Professor" comedies, Baker always makes something of the collaboration.

The first "Nutty Professor" (1996) won an Oscar for Baker's contribution and a National Society of Film Critics' prize for Murphy's performance as several members of the same family. It remains a tour-de-force for both men, as well as an early indication of the versatility that would finally earn an Oscar nomination for Murphy in "Dreamgirls."

Unfortunately, the more Murphy and Baker work together, the more desperate and derivative their scripts appear. Have they just become more interested in achieving effects than in telling stories? It's still fun to watch Murphy disappear into wildly different characters in their latest collaboration, "Norbit," but the movie lacks momentum and seems to end about a dozen times.

Murphy plays three major roles. He's most appealing as nerdy, confidence-deprived Norbit, who never fell out of love with his childhood sweetheart, Kate (Thandie Newton), a girl he met at the Golden WonTon Restaurant and Orphanage. Murphy also plays Norbit's adoptive father, Mr. Wong, and Norbit's large and monstrously selfish wife, Rasputia.

With her lethally long fingernails and pounds of raging flesh that refuse to fit into even a queen-size bathing suit, Rasputia is a nightmare vision who might have been dreamed up by Fellini during an especially restless night. Still, she's never as funny as she's clearly intended to be. Perhaps that has something to do with her source.

Murphy and his brother, Charles, were inspired to write the script after watching Internet footage of a married couple having a street fight. They were shocked by the wife's domination of her husband. In Eddie's words, the movie is "about that battered husband."

It's an interesting notion for a comedy, but the Murphys fail to follow through and carry the idea to any kind of logical conclusion. They turned over the script to the writing team of David Ronn and Jay Scherick, who previously paired up for remakes of "I Spy" and "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner." The lightweight director, Brian Robbins, did last year's lame Tim Allen remake of "The Shaggy Dog."

The result, not surprisingly, plays like Retread City, with Eddie Murphy once more using a fat suit to milk laughs. Rasputia never becomes much more than a walking sight gag; she's not remotely threatening as a dominatrix. Norbit's struggle to assert himself is so formulaic that the movie seems to stop whenever it pays attention to him. Mr. Wong never comes into focus.

It's painful to watch Cuba Gooding Jr. wasting his time in the cardboard role of Kate's con-artist boyfriend. Newton visibly struggles to add weight to her character, who is even less substantial than the runaway wife she recently played in "The Pursuit of Happyness." Why not cast Murphy in these roles as well? The novelty value might make them marginally more entertaining.

More movies on MSNBC 

50
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey
The question is not whether Murphy can do anything. He can. The question is why he would want to make a movie as squirmingly unfunny as Norbit.Read Full Review »
40
The New York Times: A.O. Scott
Not exactly uproarious. But Mr. Murphy, going back at least to his Gumby and Buckwheat days on "Saturday Night Live," has always had the ability to turn broad caricature into something stranger and more inventive.Read Full Review »
40
Salon.com: Stephanie Zacharek
There are so many problems with Norbit that when you try to pin one down, another one splooges out elsewhere.Read Full Review »
38
Boston Globe: Wesley Morris
The only recommendable thing about Norbit is that he's not as bad as every other person in this movie.Read Full Review »
30
Washington Post: Desson Thomson
Much of the movie -- which Murphy wrote with a small posse of collaborators -- is taken up with the torturously dull, not to mention unbelievable, romance between Norbit and Kate (a disappointingly lackluster Newton) and the tedious agenda of Cuba Gooding Jr. as a schemer-manipulator.Read Full Review »
25
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: Owen Gleiberman
Murphy speaks in a breathy lisp, as if his mouth had been partially buttoned shut, and he doesn't give himself the nerd's traditional redeeming feature of a geeky, slide-rule intellect. Norbit, all frozen gawk, is just a very dim bulb.Read Full Review »
25
ReelViews: James Berardinelli
It's crass, cruel, and borderline offensive, but the laughs that could redeem all of that are missing. Material as bad as the tripe that comprises Norbit can be endured only if there's a payoff. In this case, the point seems to be that some actors will do anything for a buck.Read Full Review »
20
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Sam Adams
Murphy and his brother Charlie, who collaborated on the screenplay, seem to have drawn the wrong lesson from the latter's stint on "Chappelle's Show." Where Dave Chappelle used stereotypes to confront prejudice, the Murphys (and their co-screenwriters Jay Scherick and David Ronn) merely squeeze a few grudging drops from caricatures that were wrung dry in the age of vaudeville.Read Full Review »
See all Norbit reviews at metacritic.com »