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Beauty Shop
Movie Info:

 (7/10) Runtime: 104
Public Rating: 9.18 (11 votes) Director: Bille Woodruff
Your Rating:   MPAA Rating:
Genre: comedy Year: 2005
Writer(s): Elizabeth Hunter (story) , Kate Lanier and Norman Vance, Jr (screenplay)
Distributor: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer MGM
Reviewed by: Avril Carruthers
 
Review:

Produced by David Hoberman, Robert Teitel, George Tillman, Jr, Queen Latifah, Shakim Compere.

Cast: Queen Latifah, Alicia Silverstone, Andie MacDowell, Alfre Woodard, Mena Suvari, Della Reese, Kevin Bacon, Djimon Hounsou, L’il JJ.

 

A female version of Barbershop 1 & 2 with all the verbal music, attitudes, the politically incorrect expressions and the outrageous come-backs of the first successful film, Beauty Shop stars Queen Latifah and a raft of strong, sassy, confident women, both black and white.

 

In Barbershop 2 Queen Latifah’s role as the feisty Gina from the beauty shop next door to the barbershop cried out for her own vehicle and here she is, having moved from Chicago to Atlanta for her daughter Vanessa’s special music school. She is working in the trendy salon of catty poseur Jorge, played by a very campy Kevin Bacon with streaked (and one assumes, fashionable) bed-hair. Here Gina impresses her posh Southern clientele with her professional flair as well as her own special hair conditioner, made in her kitchen at home. So impressive is she that the jealous Jorge feels he must put her in her place. Gina won’t have that and quits, taking with her the talented Lynn (Alicia Silverstone), erstwhile shampoo girl, and several of Jorge’s best, and richest, clients.

 

Her very own Beauty Shop necessitates an immediate make-over of the run down and old-fashioned premises she can only just afford. With the shop is a hole in the ceiling through which some fine jazz piano filters down along with a tangle of dangerous-looking electrical wiring. Joe the electrician is warmly sexy Djimon Hounsou. He’s also the pianist from upstairs. Recently-widowed Gina is not ready for another relationship, though her pre-pubescent daughter Vanessa (Paige Hurd), whose musical prowess has earned her a place at the special music school, is mightily impressed and immediately asks for lessons.

 

With Gina in the Beauty Shop is a selection of highly individual stylists and customers all as verbally expressive as she is. Notable among them is a sparkling Alfre Woodard as Ms Josephine and Della Reese as Mrs Towner. Alicia Silverstone’s Lynn as the only white girl on the staff echoes the role of the one white barber in Barbershop 1 & 2. Her wannabe-black mock-up, caught up in the enthusiasm of black sistahood, is obvious to everyone except her, but her moves on the dance floor with the ambiguously sexy only male on the staff James (Bryce Wilson) have the sistahs with their jaws on the floor. Other echoes of B 1 & 2 include young black street entrepreneur Willie, played by L’il JJ, and Catfish Rita (Sheryl Underwood), a vendor of home-style cooking which tempts even the wasp-ish client Terri (Andie McDowell) to add a little ‘big’n’beautiful’ to her booty.

 

There is much open admiring of female booties. It’s a far cry from a simple, safe mere acceptance of the female form in all her sizes and shapes. This teeters on the razor’s edge of PC, mainly through Willie’s habit of following suitable candidates with a video camera trained on their rear ends. It’s indulged with an outraged frown and some cheeky put-downs. If nothing else, Beauty Shop is about the culture of individual artistic self-expression and the need to stand up for one’s right to do so, especially when it involves the creative decoration and enhancement of one’s own hair and body.

 

Opposition to Gina’s success comes in the form of an obnoxious Inspector, paid sneakily by Jorge, who fines her exorbitantly for specious infractions. Rich, influential client Joanne (played with wide-eyed aplomb by a pneumatic Mena Suvari) first promotes Gina’s conditioner, then drops her on a vengeful whim. A mystery client in crisis who turns out to be even more influential than Joanne turns Gina’s salon and her conditioner – now tellingly called ‘Hair Crack’ – into an instant Mecca for hair and beauty clients.

 

The culture of the Beauty Shop, like the barbershop, is one of encouragement and social solidarity for a positive black identity that is healthily self-aware, hard-working, fun and endlessly resilient and creative. Like director Bille Woodruff’s last feature film Honey, Beauty Shop is a light, fun story of adversity overcome with exuberant talent and persistence.

 

© Avril Carruthers                        31st May 2005

 

 

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