Is
it over yet? Is it over yet? Is it over yet?
Yes, that may seem like a fairly obvious criticism of "Are We There
Yet?" but then it's also completely accurate. This terminally dumb
and thoroughly crude kids flick is going to seem excruciating to most
adults. It's one of those movies where you'd be glad to pay another eight
bucks to leave the theater.
Unfortunately, most adults in attendance will have kids with them. The
kids aren't going to want to leave. Kids love potty jokes. "Are We
There Yet?" is big on potty jokes. It has people sliding on ice and
cars being thoroughly trashed inside and out. Kid heaven, parent hell.
What Ice Cube is doing in this movie is anybody's guess; but it's obviously
his own fault since it comes from his production company. It's probably
part of his gangsta-rappers-can-be-lovable-too career plan, but in the
wake of his successful and surprisingly thoughtful "Barbershop"
films, this looks exactly like the sticky little piece of glop it is.
Cube plays player Nick Persons, owner of a sports memorabilia shop in
Portland, Oregon. He looks out his window one day and spies beautiful
Suzanne Kingston (Nia Long) and decides he's in love. Only problem is
the divorced Suzanne has two bratty young kids -- daughter Lindsey (Aleisha
Allen) and younger son Kevin (Philip Bolden) -- who are hoping Mom will
reconcile with Dad. So they go out of their way to drive off any man fool
enough to court Suzanne.
Which makes Nick a prime target when he says he'll get the kids up to
Vancouver where Mom's working one weekend. First he tries a plane, then
a train, but the kids foil his best attempts to send them off, so he has
to drive them north in his brand new, tricked-out car. Which means a prank-filled
road trip for Nick and lots of cheapshots for the kids.
And that's pretty much the whole movie: The kids dump all over Nick every
chance they get, and even when they do eventually warm up to him, things
keep going wrong.
All the wrong, of course, is what kids will find right about this movie.
It's one of those exercises in adult humiliation in which children do
ever more outrageous and socially irresponsible things without any serious
consequences. They hop a train, hijack a car, assault people physically,
trigger airline security, destroy property, waste thousands of dollars
and never suffer any consequences.
All this and the movie is rated PG. Which is worse, America: Showing
a moment of nudity or teaching kids that carjacking is funny?
Beyond that, these kids are seriously bratty. So bratty that when the
script finally tries to lighten things up and explain away their behavior
-- it's all because they have no father figure -- it's too little too
late.
Then again, most adults may feel like it's too late less than 10 minutes
into this movie. Here's the scary thing: The first time you ask yourself,
"Is it over yet?" it's not even close.