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Barbershop (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Barbershop (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Barbershop

Original theatrical poster for Barbershop.
Directed by Tim Story
Produced by George Tillman, Jr.
Robert Teitel
Written by Mark Brown (also story)
Don D. Scott
Marshall Todd
Starring Ice Cube
Anthony Anderson
Eve
Sean Patrick Thomas
Michael Ealy
Troy Garity
Leonard Earl Howze
Keith David
and Cedric the Entertainer
Music by Terence Blanchard
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Release date(s) September 13, 2002
Running time 102 min
Language English
Budget $12 million (est)
Followed by Barbershop 2: Back in Business
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Barbershop is an American comedy film directed by Tim Story, produced by State Street Pictures and released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer on September 13, 2002. Starring Ice Cube, Cedric the Entertainer, and Anthony Anderson, the movie revolves about social life in a south Chicago barbershop. Barbershop also proved to be a star-making vehicle for acting newcomers Eve and Michael Ealy, and provided Ice Cube with a character different from the tough thugs he was so often called upon to portray in movies.[citation needed]

Tagline: Everyone's gettin' lined up.

Contents

[edit] Plot

On a cold winter Saturday in south-side Chicago, Calvin Palmer, Jr. (Ice Cube) decides he's had enough of trying to keep open the barbershop his father handed down to him. He can't borrow enough money to keep the place open, it's not bringing in enough revenue, and he's more interested in coming up with get-rich-quick schemes to bring in easy money. Without telling his employees or the customers, Calvin sells his barbershop to a greedy loan shark named Lester Wallace (Keith David), who promptly makes plans to turn the place into a strip club.

After spending a day at work and realizing just how vital the barbershop is to the surrounding community, Calvin rethinks his decision and tries to get his shop back...only to find out Wallace wants double the $20,000 he paid Calvin to give the shop back, and before 7 P.M. Now Calvin has only a scant few hours to try and raise enough money to save the shop.

[edit] Cast and Characters

[edit] Barbers

  • Calvin Palmer, Jr. (Ice Cube): a young expectant father, who feels like the barbershop his father left him to manage is causing undue complications in his life.
  • Eddie (Cedric the Entertainer): a 60-plus year old barber who strangely never cuts any hair. He worked under Calvin's father, and constantly compares and contrasts both Palmers and the periods they lived in.
  • Jimmy James (Sean Patrick Thomas): a recent college graduate and academically-astute young man who sees his job at the barbershop as nothing more than a temporary stop on his way to a "real" job.
  • Terri Jones (Eve): a young woman with a cheating boyfriend, who accuses Jimmy of drinking her apple juice. She is the only female barber in the shop.
  • Isaac Rosenberg (Troy Garity): the only Caucasian in the shop, Isaac is the recipient of trans-racial humor from some of the other characters, especially his nemesis, Jimmy.
  • Ricky Nash (Michael Ealy): A two-time loser who is trying to go straight by working in the barbershop.
  • Dinka (Leonard Earl Howze): An overweight immigrant from Nigeria, Dinka is the butt of many jokes based on his African nationality and his large size. He has an unrequited crush on Terri.

[edit] ATM thieves

  • J.D. (Anthony Anderson): A thief who steals an ATM and spends the duration of the film trying to find a way to pry it open. Ricky's cousin.
  • Billy (Lahmard Tate): J.D.'s accomplice in the ATM theft.

J.D. and Billy's antics are reminiscent of those of Laurel and Hardy, and two sequences in which they have to carry the heavy ATM up a long flight of stairs recalls Laurel and Hardy's Academy Award-winning short film, The Music Box (1932).

[edit] Other characters

  • Jennifer Palmer (Jazmin Lewis): Calvin's seven-months-pregnant wife, who first met Calvin in the barbershop. She reminds him a number of times about the cultural and historical significance of the shop and why he should not sell it.
  • Lester Wallace (Keith David): A crafty loan shark who buys Calvin's shop for $20,000 and plans to turn it into a strip club. After selling the shop, Calvin spends the rest of the film trying to figure out a way to raise the money to buy it back, as Lester raises the price to $40,000 after he has control of the shop.
  • Sam the Customer (Norm Van Lier): Former Chicago Bulls player "Stormin'" Norman Van Lier plays Sam, who enters the shop to collect donations to buy shoes for a young basketball player named Johnny Brown, who hopes to be recruited.

[edit] Production

Produced on a $12 million budget, Barbershop, with a story by Mark Brown and a screenplay by Brown, Marshall Todd, and Don D. Scott, was filmed in Chicago during the winter of 2001. The filmmakers used a storefront that was once a laundromat to build the set for Calvin's barbershop, and the set was duplicated on a soundstage. Similar to what he achieved with his 1997 film Soul Food, producer George Tillman, Jr. wanted to portray African Americans in a more positive and three-dimensional light than many other Hollywood films had in the past.

[edit] Subjects discussed in the barbershop

A pivotal scene from Barbershop: everyone listens as Eddie (Cedric the Entertainer), gives his controversial commentary on Rosa Parks' significance to the Civil Rights Movement.
A pivotal scene from Barbershop: everyone listens as Eddie (Cedric the Entertainer), gives his controversial commentary on Rosa Parks' significance to the Civil Rights Movement.

Like many African American (and Hispanic) barbershops, lively conversation is more important than haircuts in Calvin's barbershop, and the characters in the movie candidly discuss many topics; some trivial, some serious.

  • The significance of Rosa Parks' contribution to the Civil Rights Movement. In a sequence the filmmakers hold up as the film's centerpiece, Eddie loudly (but correctly) points out that Parks was not the only (or even the first) Black person to protest the segregated bus seating system prevalent in many metropolitan areas. Checkers Fred tells Eddie that he "better not ever let Jesse Jackson hear you talking like this," to which Eddie responds "Man, fuck Jesse Jackson!" When Jackson and Rev. Al Sharpton heard about this scene, they started a boycott campaign against the film, and called upon MGM and State Street Pictures to edit the offending sequence out of the film before it reached home video and TV. The film was released on home video in January 2003, with the Parks discussion intact.
  • Arizona citizens' initial refusal to recognize Martin Luther King, Jr. Day as an official holiday in 1993, and Martin Luther King, Jr's infidelity. Jackson and Sharpton also wanted the King reference deleted from the movie, but, like the Rosa Parks sequence, it was not.
  • Whether Black people need (or deserve) reparations.
  • White people who act "Black" (Isaac) and Black people who act "White".
  • Whether being educated makes a Black person "better" than everyone else.
  • The generation gap.
  • Evander Holyfield, Christianity, and Jesus' religion.
  • A woman's ideal figure, using Jennifer Lopez and Mother Love as contrasting examples.
  • Whether a scallop is a shellfish.

[edit] Sequels and spin-offs

Calvin cutting a customer's hair in a scene from Barbershop.
Calvin cutting a customer's hair in a scene from Barbershop.

In 2004, MGM released the sequel Barbershop 2: Back in Business. All of the original cast returned, but Tim Story did not; this movie was directed by Kevin Rodney Sullivan. The same year, Billie Woodruff directed a spin-off film entitled Beauty Shop, with Queen Latifah as the lead (Latifah's character made her debut in Barbershop 2). Beauty Shop, pushed back from a late summer 2004 release, finally reached theatres in February 2005.

During the fall of 2005, State Street and Ice Cube debuted Barbershop: The Series on the Showtime cable network, with Omar Gooding taking over Ice Cube's role of Calvin. The character "Dinka" is renamed "Yinka" on Barbershop: The Series, as "Dinka" is not a typical Nigerian name. In addition, Isaac's last name is changed from "Rosenberg" to "Brice", and the character Ricky has been replaced by a more hardened ex-con, Romadal.

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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