2 reviews
Emmy Towne (Bridget Devlin Burke) brings her new boyfriend Darryl (Demetrius Parker) home for Boxing Day (the day after Christmas). She forgot to warn them in advance, though: Daryl is black.
The plot of this film is good, but it's the jokes that make it fantastic. I found out about the racist scale (Hitler is 100, the KKK are 75, Don Imus is 20, not locking your doors in a black neighborhood because you think it's racist is 2). There are also great pop culture jokes: especially regarding Dawson's Creek, with a long spiel about the final episode, the lack of God, Joey's choices, and the failure of soulmates to connect.
I found out that a columnist is a journalist not bound by ethics, and that dating "Lenny Kravitz black" is wussy, but "Wesley Snipes black" is progressive.
I'm not really keen on how the philosophy major (Jenna St. John) is presented... somewhere between existentialist and hedonist, very amorphous. Very sexy outfit and makeup, though.
Oh, and the news report on Richard "Big Dick" Towne, the creator of powernesium and toilet paper thief, hilarious, "lot of gay sex, I started to enjoy it"...
The plot of this film is good, but it's the jokes that make it fantastic. I found out about the racist scale (Hitler is 100, the KKK are 75, Don Imus is 20, not locking your doors in a black neighborhood because you think it's racist is 2). There are also great pop culture jokes: especially regarding Dawson's Creek, with a long spiel about the final episode, the lack of God, Joey's choices, and the failure of soulmates to connect.
I found out that a columnist is a journalist not bound by ethics, and that dating "Lenny Kravitz black" is wussy, but "Wesley Snipes black" is progressive.
I'm not really keen on how the philosophy major (Jenna St. John) is presented... somewhere between existentialist and hedonist, very amorphous. Very sexy outfit and makeup, though.
Oh, and the news report on Richard "Big Dick" Towne, the creator of powernesium and toilet paper thief, hilarious, "lot of gay sex, I started to enjoy it"...
Boxing Day is a 'dramedy' about the unexpected twists that occur when a dysfunctional white family grappling with internal issues is introduced to a new member to the family – who is black.
Emmy Towne (Bridget Devlin Burke), a school teacher, meets Darryl (Demetrius Parker), a chemical engineer through an online site. She is not too keen for Darryl to meet her family, since she never heard back from the last two guys whom she brought to her house. Her family is extremely careful not to appear racist in way, but due to their limited experience, fall back on established stereotypes. Besides being in denial of their slight fear of blacks (Emmy's mother wears an emergency whistle around her neck to use in times of need!), Emmy's family has its share of strangeness – a dim podiatrist father (Jim Murphy) who is defensive about being a foot doctor and keeps a collection of diseased feet pictures, a mother (Vicki Hartford) who writes advice columns on everything under the sun, a part Chinese sister (Jenna St. John) with identity crisis (Gothic, Hippie, Commie sympathizer) and a mentally disturbed brother (Danny Gavigan) who is on the run from law, having dabbled in dangerous concoctions but with no aptitude for chemistry whatsoever. When the pair reach the Towne home situated in lily-white Maryland suburbs after deliberate delay, the family blunder their way by mistaking him for an intruder, much to Emmy's horror. Subsequently they take great pains to redeem themselves by sanitizing everything they do and say, so that they do not come across as racist. But in the process, they only make it worse, reinforcing their rejection of their own deep seated prejudices. The 'meet the family' is like walking on eggs for the couple, and the Townes'. Accidentally, everyone in the family is confronted by the skeletons they have tried to stuff into the closet . What happens after that forms the rest of the movie.
Watch Boxing Day! It has a strong story and great acting with all the actors doing full justice to their roles. A perky comedy that trips you by poking fun at going overboard trying to be PC and leaves you happily shocked at the ending. It is without doubt one of the funniest independent films I have seen in a while.
Way to go!
Emmy Towne (Bridget Devlin Burke), a school teacher, meets Darryl (Demetrius Parker), a chemical engineer through an online site. She is not too keen for Darryl to meet her family, since she never heard back from the last two guys whom she brought to her house. Her family is extremely careful not to appear racist in way, but due to their limited experience, fall back on established stereotypes. Besides being in denial of their slight fear of blacks (Emmy's mother wears an emergency whistle around her neck to use in times of need!), Emmy's family has its share of strangeness – a dim podiatrist father (Jim Murphy) who is defensive about being a foot doctor and keeps a collection of diseased feet pictures, a mother (Vicki Hartford) who writes advice columns on everything under the sun, a part Chinese sister (Jenna St. John) with identity crisis (Gothic, Hippie, Commie sympathizer) and a mentally disturbed brother (Danny Gavigan) who is on the run from law, having dabbled in dangerous concoctions but with no aptitude for chemistry whatsoever. When the pair reach the Towne home situated in lily-white Maryland suburbs after deliberate delay, the family blunder their way by mistaking him for an intruder, much to Emmy's horror. Subsequently they take great pains to redeem themselves by sanitizing everything they do and say, so that they do not come across as racist. But in the process, they only make it worse, reinforcing their rejection of their own deep seated prejudices. The 'meet the family' is like walking on eggs for the couple, and the Townes'. Accidentally, everyone in the family is confronted by the skeletons they have tried to stuff into the closet . What happens after that forms the rest of the movie.
Watch Boxing Day! It has a strong story and great acting with all the actors doing full justice to their roles. A perky comedy that trips you by poking fun at going overboard trying to be PC and leaves you happily shocked at the ending. It is without doubt one of the funniest independent films I have seen in a while.
Way to go!
- haritha_vhs
- Mar 7, 2009
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