Kurz vor der Hochzeit des besten Freundes wird das Leben des Chicagoer Schriftstellers verrückt, als der Freund die Geschichte des neuen Buches aufgrund der glühenden Vergangenheit seiner Br... Alles lesenKurz vor der Hochzeit des besten Freundes wird das Leben des Chicagoer Schriftstellers verrückt, als der Freund die Geschichte des neuen Buches aufgrund der glühenden Vergangenheit seiner Braut errät.Kurz vor der Hochzeit des besten Freundes wird das Leben des Chicagoer Schriftstellers verrückt, als der Freund die Geschichte des neuen Buches aufgrund der glühenden Vergangenheit seiner Braut errät.
- Auszeichnungen
- 8 Gewinne & 11 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Pastor
- (as Willie Carpenter)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
There is a good mix of very funny and also intense emotional moments and the audience is captured; cheering some of the cast and hissing others. It's quite uncanny that transformation occurs for certain characters especially when it's needed. Terrence Howard's character, Quentin, is a prime example. At the beginning of the film Quentin is basically a guy who lacks direction and propriety in his behavior. Over the course of the film, he becomes the voice of wisdom and the glue that holds it together for those closest to him.
Malcolm Lee's directorial debut is quite admirable in this well paced, universally appealing film. Don't miss it.
Touching at times. Hilarious at other times.
Well written story. Excellent first direction for Malcolm Lee.
Audience at TIFF reacted well to the film. The director was very gracious in responding to questions after the presentation.
Ironically, the primary strength of the film also emerges as its overarching weakness. The movie provides so richly textured a depiction of the interrelationships between and among the wide assortment of characters that it alternately straddles the line between fascination and tedium. On the positive side, writer/director Malcolm D. Lee is not afraid to give the characters their due, to allow them to reveal their many-layered personalities in scenes that play out in real-time tempo and rhythm. One appreciates the fact that we are not being rushed along from one highly dramatic moment to another without time to really get to know the characters as people. The counter effect of this, however, is that the film often seems too talky, self-indulgent and dramatically flat, a fact not helped by the excessive 122-minute running time. In addition, the whole novel-publishing aspect of the story seems both unnecessary and contrived, not to mention lacking in credibility since it becomes a bit difficult to believe that, if he were so terrified about his friends discovering his true perceptions of them, Harper would have written the novel in the first place. Moreover, when we hear voice-over recitations of a few sections of the novel itself, we are struck dumb that so badly written and trite a work could be so critically lauded and commercially successful.
However, the film's virtues do, ultimately, outweigh its imperfections. The actors and actresses turn in uniformly fine performances and the film deals intelligently and sensitively with the age-old issues of the fear of commitment and the two-faced attitude many men have when it comes to female infidelity. Lee, within the context of his characters, confronts these issues with subtlety rather than heavyhandedness and the last half hour or so of the film turns into a very moving celebration of the qualities of acceptance, commitment and sacrifice necessary to make a relationship truly work. `The Best Man' may require a little patience at times to get through, but the reward for those willing to give it a try makes it worth the effort.
The characters range from classic (Morris Chestnut's Lance) to surprisingly fresh (Terrence Howard's Quentin), all with very distinct personalities, yet believable connections. (Am I the only one who is so sick of using the "went to college together" excuse for why some film characters are friends, despite the obvious fact that in reality the "cool rebel" doesn't hang with the "prudish nerd" and so on.)
Not only does the film have refreshing takes on the inter-dimensional relationships of characters, it's not afraid to face the characters honestly, to show each individual's flaws...they have depth, soul, contradictions, much like REAL PEOPLE! Amazing! The themes are universal; friends, love, mistakes, forgiveness. The dialogue is witty, yet not overly done to sound like "movie dialogue" that no one in the real world speaks.
And though the race of the characters does not matter in this movie, I applaud Malcolm D. Lee for writing a film featuring black characters that are all successful, independent and intelligent. No one is rapping or drug dealing, no one is blaming the man for setbacks. The characters actually represent the MAJORITY of the black community, just regular people, living their lives. How refreshing from the Hollywood stereotypes, believed by suburban white America, that every successful black man is a rapper or a basketball player and every other one a criminal or janitor. It's a shame this film didn't make for money, perhaps then we'd see more of this trend, movies based on script rather than race.
Though I loved it, this film probably won't change your life. It's not one that will ever be considered one of the best films ever (though I think it took bold steps in closing the race gap in film). And I'm not saying it's an absolute must-see for everyone. But for discerning viewers with perhaps some taste and hunger for something a little different, I recommend you treat yourself to something that you probably haven't seen in a long time: a simply good movie.
'The Best Man' Cast Through the Years
'The Best Man' Cast Through the Years
WUSSTEST DU SCHON:
- WissenswertesDuring the scene after the bachelor party when Harper (Taye Diggs) was at Jordan's (Nia Long) apartment, Jordan slaps Harper. The slap was unscripted. Nia Long improvised because she felt "something was missing." Taye Diggs', "Whoo," reaction was real and he was angry at Nia for hitting him so hard. Once he saw it on screen, he liked the scene.
- PatzerWhen the guys are playing cards and Lance gets mad and jumps across the table at Q, everything flies off the table. In the next shot the table is back and not disturbed.
- Zitate
Jordan Armstrong: You know, maybe if I had the luxury of getting my ass whooped, I could be calm right now. But I have been drinking tequila shots, my hormones are raging out of control, I'm emotional, I'm horny, and I don't wanna hear about no goddamn peas! Fuck you! Good night!
- VerbindungenFeatured in Ginuwine, R.L., Tyrese, Case: The Best Man I Can Be (1999)
- SoundtracksWhat You Want
Written by Tariq Trotter, Scott Storch, Mike Lowe, Jaguar Wright (as Jacqueline Wright), Questlove (as Ahmir Thompson)
Produced by Grand Wizard w/Scott Storch (as S. Storch), M. Lowe, Richard Nichols (as R. Nichols)
Performed by The Roots featuring Jaguar Wright (as Jaguar)
The Roots appear courtesy of MCA Records, Inc.
Top-Auswahl
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Details
Box Office
- Budget
- 9.000.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 34.102.780 $
- Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
- 9.031.660 $
- 24. Okt. 1999
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 34.573.780 $
- Laufzeit2 Stunden
- Farbe
- Sound-Mix
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1