DELIVER US FROM EVA
Movies like Brown Sugar, The Best Man, The Brothers, and
Two Can Play That Game -- aimed squarely at middle-class Black America
-- are just as formulaic as those that target urban hip-hop audiences. But
Deliver Us from Eva, from The Brothers director Gary Hardwick and
featuring Brothers star Gabrielle Union, rises above genre conventions
and manages to be a likable comedy with LL Cool J proving he has leading-man
chops by creating genuine screen chemistry with the talented Union.
In this apparent nod to Jane Austen's Emma, the usual Mars/Venus tiffs
are played out against the requisite lite-soul soundtrack with some emotional
gravitas. And the headstrong, independent Eva isn't the caricature of the ball
buster. She's feisty and formidable, a no-nonsense health professional tough
enough to be offered a city inspector's job in Chicago. She and suave Ray
complement one another, and when their relationship hits the inevitable bumps,
it's easy to sympathize with both of them. Except for the mandatory man-hungry,
trash-talking gal and her gay sidekick in the neighborhood beauty parlor, the
film's characters are surprisingly multi-dimensional. Sure, there are plenty of
sassy wisecracks like "Messed-up men? That's redundant!" But at its core this
film is kind to players on both sides of the gender war. (105 minutes) Opens
Friday at the Entertainment (Swansea only), Providence Place Mall 16, and
Showcase cinemas.
Issue Date: February 7 -13, 2003
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