![]() ![]() While the film throws out a few clunkers and at other times overemphasises a joke, it does achieve an amiably geniality all round. The gets some amusing mileage out of seeing him dressed in checkered pants, listening to white funk, blunting his expletives and losing his Ebonics. On the other hand, you tend to think if the races were reversed in the film and it were an all-White organisation attempting to defend itself from cultural pollution by African-Americans and featured a White hero who is seduced by a Black woman and starts listening to rap, gets gold fillings in his teeth, starts gang bangin’ in the hood and has to be forcibly made to return to his own culture, there would surely be a considerable uproar from the African-American community.Īll of that said, Undercover Brother is at its funniest during the scenes in the middle when Eddie Griffin is transformed into a liberal White person after being seduced by Denise Richards. (l to r) White She Devil (Denise Richards), Sistah Girl (Aunjanue Ellis) and Undercover Brother (Eddie Griffin) I cannot say that I felt particularly offended by any of this. That said, the film is more than happy to turn around and voice an opinion about me – in caricaturing white people as wuss’s who have no balls, no natural cool, of artistic tastes that are limited to Friends (1994-2004) and Celine Dion, and even of white people’s food being bland (there is a lot of mileage made out of gags about mayonnaise on food). I don’t know – it is not a culture I am part of and it is not my place to offer an opinion. Whether it is playing into racial caricature or laughing at one’s own sense of identity is a vexatious question. Undercover Brother tends to play very much into the caricatures pushed by these stand-up acts – that Black men are well-hung, extremely horny and compulsively unfaithful, that they are perpetually in trouble with the law, that they love dope, junk food and lose all sense at the notion of being able to sleep with a White girl. Many like the appeal of finding an ethnic identity and the ability to laugh at themselves it holds, other African-Americans though don’t like the racial caricatures it plays into. The type of humour pushed by these comedians is certainly a source of controversy, even among African-American people. It has seen a huge number of stars rise from its ranks, including the likes of Chris Rock, Chris Tucker, Martin Lawrence, Cedric the Entertainer, D.L. Eddie Griffin as Undercover Brotherīlack Humour is a genre all of its own that seems to have emerged in the last few years, cultivated by places like the BET channel in the US. ![]() But that is the way Undercover Brother seems to want to have it. Lee, who is the cousin of Spike Lee, the African-American director who has managed to corner the market on acerbic commentary on American race relations). It is a film that is hard to write about without allowing American race issues to come into it one way or another. Being white and, moreover, a non-American, I am probably the wrong ethnic group to be reviewing Undercover Brother. This is where one gets into somewhat contentious territory. Undercover Brother does a funny spoof of the cool, the clothes, the music and even the credits sequences of the Blaxploitation film, although ultimately it derives most of its humour from racial caricatures. In the Blaxploitation parody stakes, there was also the subsequent Black Dynamite (2009). In the late 1990s/early 2000s, we seemed to be on the verge of a Blaxploitation revival – Quentin Tarantino keeps referencing the genre in Pulp Fiction (1994) and Jackie Brown (1997) we saw a remake of Shaft (2000) and conscious homages such as Original Gangstas (1996) and Bones (2001), while earlier the same year as this the Austin Powers series beat Undercover Brother to the punch in spoofing the Blaxploitation genre with Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002). The Blaxploitation genre, a series of films featuring hip Black heroes, emerged in the early 1970s following the success of in particular Shaft (1971) and carried on through numerous imitators like the Superfly and Cleopatra Jones films as well as such genre permutations as Blacula (1972). (The influence is unmistakable to the point that the film has even employed Michael McCullers who wrote both the Austin Powers sequels). Undercover Brother is a film that has clearly taken its cue from Austin Powers, International Man of Mystery (1997) and sequels and sets out to do for the Blaxploitation film what Austin Powers did for the James Bond films.
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