Reviewed by: Christopher Walker
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: | Average |
Moviemaking Quality: |
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Primary Audience: | Adults |
Genre: | Comedy Drama Adaptation |
Length: | 1 hr. 53 min. |
Year of Release: | 2007 |
USA Release: |
October 12, 2007 (wide—1900 theaters) |
Sequel: “Why Did I Get Married Too?”
What is true love and how do you know when you have found it? Answer
Is formalized marriage becoming obsolete? Answer
Many people are convinced that traditional marriages don’t work and that this practice should be abandoned. What does the Bible say about marriage?
How can I deal with temptations? Answer
What are the consequences of sexual immorality? Answer
Featuring | Sharon Leal, Tasha Smith, Michael Jai White, Tyler Perry, Malik Yoba, Janet Jackson, Richard T. Jones, Keesha Sharp, Denise Boutte, Jill Scott, Shawn Knowles, Dah-uh Morrow, Lisa Wheelous, Desiree Zurowski, Greyson Chadwick, Sean Tyson, Robert Hatch, Scottie Knollin, Randall Sims, Mark D. Headen, Lamarr Gulley, David Lowe, Sheri Mann Stewart, Bob Cousins, Christopher Wheelous |
Director |
Tyler Perry “Diary of a Mad Black Woman,” “Madea’s Family Reunion” and “Daddy’s Little Girls” |
Producer | Roger M. Bobb, Reuben Cannon, Joseph P. Genier, Tyler Perry |
Distributor |
Lionsgate (Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.) |
“…Because no one inspires me more.”
Tyler Perry has released his fourth film called “Why Did I Get Married?”, his second this year after last February’s “Daddy Little Girls,” based on his stage play of the same name following the lives of four married couples as they share a week-long vacation together as they try to work out any problems between them and build a stronger relationship. It’s a step up for this triple-threat prolific director/writer/producer, whose claim to fame is the cross-dressing character Madea. Not only is it a step up, but its his best effort to date. (I can’t comment on DLG because I haven’t seen it as of posting this review).
On a trip to the Rocky Mountains in Alaska for their annual weekend retreat, four couples reexamine their lives shared together. Terry (Tyler Perry) wants to spend some time with his workaholic wife Diane (Sharon Leal), who is too busy to sit down and spend time as a family, not even with her own daughter Kenya; Marcus (Michael Jai White) wants his wife Angela (Tasha Smith) to stop talking smack and embarrassing him in public, and wants to make their relationship work; Sheila (Jill Scott) is trying to repair her marriage to Mike (Richard T. Jones), unaware of the fact that he is sleeping with Sheila’s friend Trina (Denise Boutte); Patricia (Janet Jackson) and Gavin (Gavin) are considered the perfect couple as Patricia was the one who organized the annual event, but suffers from her own setback when their son was recently killed in a car accident.
They are joined by the quiet town’s sole sheriff Troy (Lamman Rucker), who helps out Sheila when her husband Mike makes her drive instead of flying with him an Sheila is the only one in the group with a relation and understanding of God’s love, and displays this affection many times in the film. There is one instant of using the name of Jesus in a negative way, but is made in a comical delight that you forget it was there. There’s some talk about sex, some sensual subject matter, and a scene of violence.
The film features the first on-screen appearance of Jill Scott, who plays Sheila with such power and integrity that she is the driving force of the movie. (A backstory is that the singer/actress HERSELF was going through a divorce at the time. Perfect casting!) The same can’t be said for Janet Jackson, who I felt was miscast as the psychiatrist teacher/friend, as this was her first role in seven years (last seen in 2000s sequel “The Nutty Professor II: The Klumps”). Tyler Perry had one of his best roles in the movie from the gentlemen side, although Michael Jai White comes in as a strong second, as a man who is trying everything to make his relationship stronger with his wife.
The screenplay has its choppy soap opera moments, like Perry’s previous works, but Perry gets points for tying to take it up a notch and interweave personal relationships throughout. This is a solid step up from those Madea films, whom he is thinking about revisiting next year. Don’t bring back Madea, these are the kind of films Perry should focus on: real life situations with a positive, and sometimes to a degree, spiritual message.
Violence: Mild / Profanity: Minor / Sex/Nudity: Mild
See list of Relevant Issues—questions-and-answers.
It deals with relationships from a secular and from an intimate viewpoint. The infrastructure of relationships and the consequences of our marriages based on how we treat them and each other. While enjoying the movie, one particular characteristic became apparent: types of marriages. Rocky marriages, marriages surviving personal loss and pain, adulturous marriages, abuse in marriage and manipulation in marriages. As the characters became more transparent, I found myself wondering how many people could catagorize their “personal situation” to the plots unraveling in the movie. Even as newlyweds, I self-discovered some personal traits that I saw on the screen, in my newly found marriage, either with myself, my husband or both of us, that I didnt like with them and need to reconsider with myself. It became retrospective, and despite the secularism in it (drinking, language) it served its purpose with us: opening up a door of opportunity to discuss some realities we need to work on to hopefully avoid serious consequences in our marriage.
Wonderful movie that’s worth taking the time to view. And a witness to the Lord in its own way. It pique’d my mother-in-law’s interests in going back to church and she asked to go with us. She also started visiting churches, seeking the truth of the gospel in these last days, as well as questioning the bible more. So, for us, God blessed us as a family through it. Thank you Lord!
My Ratings: Offensive / 4½