Madea’s Big Happy Family
Tyler Perry Back in Drag for More Tomfoolery as Madea
Madea’s Big Happy Family [2011]
Rated PG-13 for profanity, mature themes and drug use.
Running time: 106 Minutes
Distributor: Lionsgate Films
Film Review by Kam Williams
Very Good (3 stars)
Hold onto your wigs and fat suits, folks, because Tyler Perry is back in
drag as America’s sassiest granny. But don’t make the mistake of attributing
the Madea franchise’s enduring appeal to the loudmouthed hussy’s
bodaciousness alone, since she’s as much beloved for her timely sermonizing
as for all that trademark tomfoolery.
While undeniably upping the ante in terms of sheer frivolity, this sixth
installment is also grounded by a bittersweet storyline. At the point of
departure, we find Madea’s niece, Shirley (Loretta Devine), being informed
by her physician (Philip Anthony-Rodriguez) about a resurgence of the cancer
that she’s been fighting for the past seven years.
What does still matter to her, however, is seeing her three children one last time to break the unfortunate news to them in person. The trouble is that all of them are currently consumed by bad relationships, each more in crisis than the next.
Daughter Tammy (Natalie Desselle) is married to a wimp (Rodney Perry) who lets their smart aleck sons (Stevie Wash, Jr. and Benjamin Aiken) walk all over her. Materialistic middle-child Kimberly (Shannon Kane) cares so much about her high-paying corporate job and the trappings of success that she ignores her toddler and takes her patient hubby (Isaiah Mustafa) for granted.
Elsewhere, 18 year-old Byron (Bow Wow), Shirley’s youngest, is being
pressured by his gold digger of a girlfriend (Lauren London) to supplement
his modest income by selling drugs on the street again. Adding to the
recent-parolee’s angst is the baby-mama drama surrounding his hypercritical
ex’s (Teyana Taylor) demands for more child support for their son.
Care to hazard a guess whose help Shirley enlists to slap some sense, both
literally and figuratively, into this dysfunctional menagerie? Madea, of
course, proceeds to browbeat her misbehaving extended family into shape in
her own inimitable style which simply will not be ignored.
Along for the ride purely for comic relief are a couple of embarrassing
relatives: Aunt Bam (Cassi Davis) and Mr. Brown (David Mann). The former is
a feisty septuagenarian who smokes marijuana and flirts shamelessly ("Are
you married?" "Are you straight?") with younger men. The latter is a
garishly-dressed master of the malapropism who somehow convincingly confuses
the words "prostitute" with "prostate," "carbon peroxide" with "carbon
monoxide," and even "colonoscopy" with "Coca Cola." Such distracting
buffoonery notwithstanding, Madea as usual miraculously manages to
straighten everybody out, and right in the nick of time for the uplifting,
closing credits Kodak moment.
Melodramatic tough love as meaningful group therapy!
Related Links
Bow Wow Interview - Madea's Big Happy Family [2011]
Madea’s Big Happy Family (2011)
Madea Goes to Jail (2009)
Madea’s Witness Protection (2012)
A Madea Christmas (2013)