#94 Norbit
Give me an 80s Eddie
Murphy film and a few beers and I’m happy. Beverly Hills Cop and Trading Places
are just brilliant movies and I could happily watch them at any time. Give me a
post 80s Eddie Murphy film (with the exception of Bowfinger, Shrek and Shrek 2)
and I’ll sit in the corner and cry until you take it away. So you can imagine
my displeasure at finding out I had to watch Norbit for this list.
The story of Norbit
(Eddie Murphy) starts with a baby being abandoned at a orphanage/ restaurant
where he is raised by Mr Wong (Eddie Murphy). At the orphanage he has a
childhood love Kate (Thandie Newton) who gets adopted leaving Norbit all alone.
When he gets a little older he meets Rasputia (I bet you can’t guess….), who
saves him from some bullies and takes him as her boyfriend. They eventually
marry and Rasputia gets fatter, meaner, more obnoxious and is generally an
unpleasant bully. Kate moves back to town to buy the orphanage, but is engaged
to Deion Hughes (Cuba Gooding Jr), which upsets Norbit’s plans to get back with
his true love. However Hughes is a conman and the rest of the film plays in a
standard will true love win whilst the bad guys get their comeuppance scenario?
So has Eddie Murphy
made one of those rare films that will make me change my mind about his
downward spiral into the depths of the terminally unfunny? Unfortunately not,
this movie simply failed to tickle me at all. The only time I laughed in the
entire movie was when a duck that Norbit was playing with in the restaurant gets
slaughtered and Norbit is given the head to play with. Any film where duck
mutilation is the funniest moment is not something that I could recommend to
anybody.
The problem with the
humour is that it all relies heavily on tired stereotypes. Rastputia’s obesity
of course is a major point of humour for her character. As she breaks beds when
getting a little over-enthusiastic, Cannonballs down a waterslide, or breaks a seat
to fit in a car you just can’t help but start to inspect the fluff from your
belly button in an attempt to occupy your brain in a more meaningful manner. The
movie makers do their best to demonise her at every moment and you can’t help
but compare that to other movies with similar fat jokes that went the other way
and showed that just because someone’s not the Hollywood idea of perfection,
then it doesn’t mean they’re ugly (eg Shallow Hal). Perhaps if they didn’t have
Thandie Newton as his true love then this wouldn’t have seemed so bad, but
really they just seem to be sending the message out as fat equals bad, skinny
equals good.
Norbit is a sweet
character, but really it’s just been done before. Murphy plays him in very much
the same way that Adam Sandler played Robert Boucher in The Waterboy. Softly
spoken and sticking out his chin slightly (every lazy actors portrayal of
somebody who is a little slow). Actually the latter half of the story is
slightly similar to Sandler’s The Wedding Singer, but where that film had some
moments of pure genius (BILLY IDOL!), this doesn’t.
Murphy’s other role
being the racist Mr Wong in this movie is just as deplorable as the fat jokes
used for Rasputia. His humour being based around being generally offensive and
speaking in pidgin English. He reminded me slightly of Bernard Bresslaw as Fan
Choy in One of Our Dinosaurs is Missing. That movie was however made thirty two
years before Norbit, at a time when this sort of humour was more accepted, so
at least that has an excuse.
Outside of the humour
of these characters, pretty much every other joke is toilet based. I’m sure
I’ve made this clear before, but I love a good fart gag. Unfortunately all of
these have come straight from the recycling plant too. I’m just thankful they
persuaded Thandie Newton to be in this movie. At least there was something
pretty to watch whilst I slowly died inside.
I’m not sure what
shocked me more about this movie when I was doing a little research on it. The
fact that it made so much money at the box office, or that it was nominated for
an Oscar (best make-up). To be fair, the make up was very good, but being done
by legend that is Rick Baker, then that’s not much of a surprise. The box
office success though? Are there really that many people out there who are
still hoping that one day Eddie Murphy will be funny again and go to each of
his movies in the vain hope that this will be the film that he makes a
spectacular comeback? If anyone remembers Quantum Leap then you may remember
that there was an evil leaper who went around trashing peoples lives as Sam
Beckett tried to save others. I’m starting to suspect that they may be
responsible for Eddie Murphy still finding an audience.
So now for the big
question: At what point in time did Eddie Murphy decide that playing multiple
roles in a movie was a good idea? This is something he’s done several times now
and I really can’t work out why (OK, so it worked in Bowfinger, but that
doesn’t excuse it). Do the studios save money by only hiring one actor? Does he
get paid three times? Really, what is the point? I think this is one of the
major problems in this movie. Murphy used to be cool, charming and funny, which
may have hidden any flaws in his acting, now he seems to have lost these assets
you just can’t escape him.
The tagline for this
movie was “Have you ever made a big mistake?”, I just can’t help but think that
Murphy’s was not to retire from filmmaking in 1990.
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