Madea’s Family Reunion (Full Screen)
Picture: C
Sound: C+ Extras: C+ Film: B-
Tyler Perry’s Madea films just keep becoming more and more
popular. He is back as the woman who
never holds back in Madea’s Family Reunion, a 2006 theatrical release
(based on the play) that held in there better than some industry “experts”
though. This time, Madea has to take
care of a young preteen girl, deal with relationship troubles of two of her
nieces (one unable to commit, the other married to an abusive husband) and try
to hold back before she gets her own self in deep trouble not suffering fools
gladly.
The great thing about Perry being Madea is that the
character represents the return of the repressed for so many women, whether
young, old, black, white, rich, poor or otherwise a survivor. There is a Christian core to these films,
but they are sincere, not preachy or fascist.
There is also great wit and some great jokes that are all the funnier
when delivered with Perry’s uncanny sense of comic timing. How good is this film? As good as the previous ones and strong
enough to attract top talents like Blair Underwood, Lynn Whitfield, Jenifer
Lewis, Maya Angelou and Cicely Tyson.
If you have never seen a Tyler Perry film, you are missing out on some
smart, fun stuff.
Though the film is available widescreen and we received
such a copy of Diary Of A Mad Black Woman when we covered that one, but
this DVD was a more commercial full screen edition and the result is a lack of
definition, color consistency and depth the other widescreen issue likely
delivers more of. The Dolby Digital 5.1
mixes are also off kilter, seeming overgeneral in soundfield and not very
rich. Surrounds are off too. Extras include four featurettes, trailers,
deleted scenes and Perry’s audio commentary.
Read more about Diary Of A Mad Black Woman at:
http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/2353/Diary+Of+A+Mad+Black+Woman+(Widescreen)
- Nicholas Sheffo