Review: Madea Goes to Jail
Filed under: Comedy, Drama, New Releases, Lionsgate Films, Theatrical Reviews, Religious

Heaven help me, this Madea character is starting to grow on me. In Madea Goes to Jail, Tyler Perry's latest adaptation of one of his innumerable stage plays, his giant, pistol-packing alter ego finally runs afoul of the law one too many times and finds herself in the big house (not Big Momma's House, the big house). As a character, Madea felt randomly assembled in Diary of a Mad Black Woman and Madea's Family Reunion, but now Perry has grown her into a larger-than-life force of nature that is genuinely funny.
Madea Goes to Jail would be a lot better, in fact, if it were actually about Madea going to jail, or about Madea at all. But she's merely a supporting character in the film, which is really about a young lawyer and his shrewish fiancee dealing with elements from his past, with light Christian themes baked into the crust. In other words, it's more or less the same movie Perry has been making all along, with one-dimensional villains, catty women, and cringe-inducing melodrama. The addition of Rudy Huxtable as a crack whore certainly raises my interest level, though.
That'd be Keshia Knight Pulliam, who is 29 years old now, if you can believe that. She plays Candy, a girl from the wrong side of the tracks -- someone actually uses that figure of speech -- who's now hooked on the junk and turning tricks on the streets of Atlanta. Our dashing hero lawyer, Josh (Derek Luke), a prosecutor in the D.A.'s office, grew up in the same ghetto and is astonished to be reunited with her after she's arrested. But his purely platonic desire to help her is hampered by his wealthy fiancee, Linda (Ion Overman), who sees no reason to reach out to "those people" when it's Candy's own damn fault she's so messed up.
Linda is an unbelievable snob, and I use the word "unbelievable" in its literal sense: As a character, and like most of Perry's villains, she is not even remotely plausible. She's too single-mindedly eeeeevil, an amalgam of selfishness, vanity, and condescension. She's a cartoon character. I half expected her to grow a mustache, just so she could twirl it while tying Candy to some railroad tracks.
She suits Perry's purposes, though, which is to give the audience a monster to root against without having to think very hard or ponder a lot of angles. This tendency toward oversimplification has always been my problem with Perry, and you'd think the audience would be insulted by it after a while. Maybe if someone would do a better job of making films targeted at a black, female Christian audience, Perry's half-baked didacticism would suffer in comparison.
In the meantime, this is the best there is, so it's nice that Perry is improving, albeit in small increments, as a director, writer, and performer. Madea Goes to Jail finds him at his loosest and most confident yet. Madea's ancient brother, Joe (also played by Perry), is an avid marijuana user, which earns big laughs in some early scenes, and Madea herself is unabashedly disdainful of religion and its practitioners. Somehow Perry gets away with these very transgressive jokes, which might offend his target audience if they weren't already quite happily in the palm of his hand. They know he's just playin' around (or at least they assume he is), so the bluntness is OK.
Unfortunately, while bluntness can be effective in comedy, it tends to be counterproductive in drama. That's why all the business with Josh, Linda, and Candy misses the mark. There's not a real person anywhere in the film -- fine if you want us to laugh at them, not so much if you want us to cry.










Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
2-21-2009 @ 8:21PM
jy said...
Madea is about as real as many black grandmothers,aunts,older cousins can get.
Reply
2-21-2009 @ 7:51PM
Tor said...
I half expected her to grow a mustache, just so she could twirl it while tying Candy to some railroad tracks.
If I may pitch an adjustment to this:
"I half expected her to grow a mustache, just so she could twirl it while tying Candy to the railroad tracks the unfortunate girl grew up on the wrong side of."
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2-22-2009 @ 2:05PM
Mary said...
I saw the movie twice and it was hilarious.
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2-24-2009 @ 7:59PM
starry118 said...
I enjoyed watching the film...Tyler Perry was funny as Joe & Madea, Keshia Knight Pulliam showed she has range, Derek Luke and Viola Davis were fantastic, as usual, and I thought the actors who played Joshua's friend and fiancee (RonReaco Lee and Ion Overman) and Candace's friend (Vanessa Ferlito) were very natural. I think that, overall, the acting was better in this film than in his previous ones. I wish the s/l with Joshua and Candace had been developed a bit more and that there actually had been more scenes with Madea in jail, but overall, the film was entertaining.
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2-27-2009 @ 2:33PM
Alfred said...
Why is it, that every time I read or here about a Madea movie, I am reminded of another play. The original Medea was about a woman who was kicked out of her own home because her husband found someone, "better". Instead of destroying his furniture, Medea kills their kids and the bride. So it would be a modern retelling. Really kind of weird.
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3-06-2009 @ 5:06PM
Femi said...
"Madea" in this case refers to the Southern honorific, "Mother Dear". It was (and still is) frequently used as an honorific for mothers and/or grandmothers. Over time, slang (fast pronuncation, lazy elocution, etc) has shortened the phrase to MaDea, which Tyler just appropriated as a name, since many of these mothers and grandmothers are never referred to as anything else, anyway, even by their own husbands. This character's given name is highly likely not Madea. I'm sure Tyler noticed the similarity to the tragic Medaea, but when Southerners see this character's name (or African-Americans), they think of "grandma".
3-07-2009 @ 3:07AM
Alfred said...
Wow. I mean, that is a whole lot of things that Eric had little chance of knowing about. Or most movie reviewers for that matter.
The African American culture, the ancient greek play, how Tyler Perry mixed them together.
Makes me want to see his other movies. Do you know if the other movies are just as refential?
3-19-2009 @ 1:06AM
john said...
watch it online with high quality :
http://xtshare.com/movie/viewfilm.php?Id=178&view=Madea-Goes-To-Jail
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