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Beauty Salon
Beauty Shop tells the story of Gina (Queen Latifah) as she
moves to Atlanta so her daughter can go to an exclusive music school. She
finds a job as a stylist at a high end salon but after a confrontation with
her boss leaves and opens her own beauty shop.
Beauty Shop doesn’t quite rise to the occasion as it repackages and
regurgitates characters, themes and plots that we have seen before. It is one
thing to tell a story that has previously been done yet bring something new to
what may be an overdone but entertaining storyline and it is another to retell
a story and not bring anything new to the table at all. Beauty Shop falls into
the latter category and suffers greatly for it.
The main problem with Beauty Shop is that it is Barber Shop with women. From
the plot twists to the characters inside the shop, it is the exact same movie
as Barbershop except with Queen Latifah at the helm instead of Ice Cube. There
is the funny, familial and penny pinching boss, Gina (Queen Latifah). There is
the misguided, yet full of potential stylist in training, Darnelle (Keshia
Knight-Pulliman). There’s the arrogant, know it all stylist who is a pain in
everyone’s side, Chanel (Golden Brooks). There’s the novice stylist of a
different race that can’t get any business, Lynn (Alicia Silverstone) and
finally there’s the opposite sex stylist who is the only one of his kind in
the salon, James (Bryce Wilson). Add to that the money problems, someone
trying to take over the business and the possibility that the shop may have to
close for good and you have the same movie, same story without any added
flare. You even have the character that hawks their goods at the shop: in
Barbershop it was a man selling bootleg CDs and DVDs and in Beauty Shop it is
a woman selling catfish and monkey bread. The concept of being original must
have never crossed the writer’s minds.
And once again I say, can we dispense with the gay stylists. That is a
stereotype that can go to the stereotype graveyard never to be seen or heard
of again…ever. Kevin Bacon, an actor I love does an absolutely horrible and I
repeat horrible job playing Latifah’s gay and fascist boss. We can also
dispense with "metrosexuals" the new overused and unfunny effeminate male
stereotype that is going to appear in every movie where men are employed in
what are typically considered to be women’s jobs. If so, I say please stop now
before you make audiences suffer anymore then we already have at this new,
unnecessary caricature. There was one of these characters in "Guess Who", and
one of Beauty Shop’s many subplots is trying to figure out if the only male
stylist is gay, straight or a metrosexual which would be a cross between the
two.
For positives, there were some laughs and the opportunity to see a shirtless
Djimon Hounsou was almost worth my money, but overall Beauty Shop was
unoriginal and a bore. Ultimately the question is -- do you really want to
spend your money on something you’ve already seen before. For me the answer is
simple: No, I don’t.
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Sheila Dicks is a wardrobe and image consultant who teaches women how to
look slimmer by dressing to suit their body type. Visit her at
http://www.sheilasfashionsense.com to download a copy of her e-book Image
Makeovers and get How to Build a Wardrobe free.
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