Baby Boy
Twenty-year-old ex-con Jody (Tyrese Gibson) doesn't look comfortable floating
in utero in the opening image of John Singleton's Baby Boy, but
who can blame him for wanting to stay? He's got two kids of his own by two
different women, neither of whom he lives with. Instead he lives with his own
mother, foxy 36-year-old Juanita (A.J. Johnson), who has taken up with
pumped-up Melvin (Ving Rhames), an "O.G." ("old gangster") and every baby boy's
worst nightmare. Meanwhile, Jody's erratic pal Sweetpea (Omar Gooding) offers
gangbanging as an alternative, and his "baby mama" of choice, Yvette (Taraji P.
Henson), complains about having to mind the kid while Jody borrows her car to
go screw other women.
His life's a mess, and the movie is a bit of one too, cluttered and
claustrophobic but shot through with moments of eloquence and hilarity -- many
provided by Rhames in his best performance. Singleton has returned to the
passion and assurance of Boyz N the Hood, and some sequences (a love
montage with Jody going down on Yvette that embraces an entire tragic life; the
simple cut from a confrontation to a goofy bike ride that summarizes the film)
are breathtaking in their boldness. Boy succumbs to some immaturity of
its own in the end with its shoot-out ego-versus-id ending, and any film that
has Rhames spouting off on Oedipal complexes is begging too hard for a Freudian
interpretation. Nonetheless, after the indulgence of Shaft, Singleton
reclaims his role as the black conscience in mainstream film. At the Apple
Valley, Entertainment (Swansea only), Flagship, Hoyts Providence 16,
Narragansett, Opera House, Showcase, and Tri-Boro cinemas.
-- Peter Keough
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