Pootie Tang
| Pootie Tang | |
|---|---|
Theatrical release poster |
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| Directed by | Louis C.K. |
| Produced by | Caldecot Chubb David Gale Ali LeRoi Chris Rock |
| Written by | Louis C.K. |
| Starring | Lance Crouther J. B. Smoove Jennifer Coolidge Wanda Sykes with Robert Vaughn and Chris Rock |
| Music by | QD3 Prince Paul (Additional) |
| Studio | MTV Films Chris Rock Productions |
| Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
| Release date(s) | June 29, 2001 |
| Running time | 70 minutes |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
| Budget | $7 million[1] |
| Box office | $3,313,583 |
Pootie Tang is an American comedy film written and directed by Louis C.K. and released in 2001. It was adapted from a comedy sketch that first appeared on The Chris Rock Show. The character Pootie Tang is a satire of the stereotyped characters who appeared in old blaxploitation films. His speech, which vaguely resembles pidgin, is mostly unintelligible to the audience, but the other characters in the film have no problem understanding him.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
Pootie Tang (Lance Crouther), born in "a small city outside Gary, Indiana", is portrayed as a ladies' man who is "too cool for words", even as a young child. His life is marked by the deaths of his mother "Momma Dee", and shortly thereafter his father "Daddy Tang" (Chris Rock), who dies after being mauled by a gorilla during his shift at the steel mill (the third time someone had suffered that particular fate). Just before Daddy Tang's death, Pootie inherits his father's belt and is told that (as long as he has right on his side) he can "whoop anyone's ass with just that belt."
As a young adult, Pootie Tang rises to fame and becomes well-known for a variety of reasons. He sings in night clubs, stars in public service announcements for children, produces top-of-the-charts music hits, and generally defeats wrongdoers with the power of his belt. Dick Lecter (Robert Vaughn), the CEO of multi-industrial conglomerate LecterCorp, learns of Pootie Tang's positive influence on society — and his negative influence on LecterCorp's bottom line. After his henchmen and a vile villain named Dirty Dee (Reg E. Cathey) are sent away by Pootie's friends, Lecter encourages his right-hand lady, Ireenie (Jennifer Coolidge), to seduce Pootie Tang into signing an agreement with LecterCorp that would stop Pootie Tang's influence on America's children.
Pootie Tang falls for Ireenie's tricks and subsequently falls apart. His status as pop culture icon is destroyed, and he engages on a quest to "find [him]self". This journey is encouraged by Biggie Shortie (Wanda Sykes), who promises to wait for Pootie to return to her and to the rest of society. Pootie moves to a farm where the local sheriff decides Pootie and his daughter should start dating. After his single corn stalk dies, he has a vision of Daddy Tang and Momma Dee. Daddy Tang reveals that there is nothing special about Pootie's belt; instead, Pootie must fight evil with the goodness that is inside him. After dealing with Dirty Dee and his henchman Froggy (as well as getting his belt back), Pootie realizes he must move back to the city and fight crime once again.
Pootie Tang returns to the city just as Dick Lecter is unveiling the first of his new restaurant chain, Pootie's Bad Time Burgers. At a small news conference, Pootie confronts Lecter only to discover that Lecter has amassed dozens of "Pootie-alikes" (one being David Cross) who will spread the message of LecterCorp around the nation. Pootie Tang, with the help of Biggie Shortie, defeats all of these henchmen and Lecter himself. Good triumphs over evil once again, and Biggie Shortie finally gets her man: she and Pootie Tang plan to get married now that Pootie is back. Elsewhere, Dick Lecter leaves corporate life and becomes an actor, Ireenie leaves him and becomes a counselor helping at-risk teenage prostitutes, and Dirty Dee is still dirty.
[edit] Cast
- Lance Crouther (Cole Hawkins, young) as Pootie Tang
- J. B. Smoove as Trucky
- Jennifer Coolidge as Ireenie
- Wanda Sykes as Biggie Shorty
- Robert Vaughn as Dick Lecter
- Chris Rock as JB/Radio DJ/Daddy Tang
- Reg E. Cathey as Dirty Dee
- J.D. Williams as Froggy
- Mario Joyner as Lacey
- Dave Attell as Frank
- Laura Kightlinger as Anchorwoman Laura Knight
- Rick Shapiro as Shakey
- Missy Elliott as Diva
- David Cross as Pootie-alike
- Kristen Bell as Record executive's daughter
- Todd Barry as Greasy
- Bob Costas as Himself
- Bogo Bgo as Swag Master
- Conan O'Brien as Himself (uncredited)
[edit] Production
Originally a Paramount Classics film, the budget was increased and transferred to Paramount Pictures division.[2] Louis C.K. has stated that he was all but fired from the film during the editing phase. According to him, Ali LeRoi was hired to extensively re-edit the film.[2] Openly agreeing with Roger Ebert's dismissive criticism that the movie should not have even been released, Louis has said that the finished product, though containing parts he enjoyed, was far from his own vision.[3]
[edit] Reception
Critical reception was generally negative, with Rotten Tomatoes only gauging 27% positive reviews.[4] Roger Ebert gave it a one-half star rating, criticizing it for excessive use of vulgar language and demeaning portrayal of women, describing it as a "train wreck" and finishing his review by bluntly stating "This film is not in a releaseable condition".[5] Nathan Rabin at The Onion A.V. Club said Pootie Tang "borders on audience abuse" and "confuse[s] idiocy for absurdity and randomness for wit".[6] However, a few years later, fellow A.V. Club writer Scott Tobias revisited the film and included it in his New Cult Canon series, noting that "Pootie Tang repelled mainstream critics and audiences, but it holds an exalted status among alt-comedians and fans of subversive anti-comedy in general".[7]
Kevin Murphy also praised the film in his book A Year at the Movies:
Pootie Tang crosses all cultural barriers to become the dumbest movie I've seen in an entire generation. But it is also funny as hell...Pootie Tang strives for the dumbness it achieves, a feat few films can do...this is a good kind of dumb. Like mooning. Like a cat falling off a table.—[8]
[edit] Cultural references
- At the end of the horror film spoof Scary Movie 3, the aliens claim they watched a cursed video tape that spurred their visits to Earth because they thought it was Pootie Tang. In the movie Scary Movie 4, many characters argue about this film.
- In the TV show The Bernie Mac Show, Chris Rock (who appears in Pootie Tang) attends a poker game at Bernie Mac's house. A player remarks that he really enjoyed Pootie Tang, to which Rock replies that "even [his] momma didn't see Pootie Tang." Also in the episode "The Talk" Wanda's friend tells Bernie that she was in the video store and she saw Bernie on the cover of Pootie Tang. Bernie denies that he is who she saw, but she insists she is correct.
- Fat Tony (rapper) has the lyric "...and I make the coochies stang like I'm Pootie Tang" in his 2010 song "Luv It Mayne", also remixed by Das Racist.
- In Big Sean's new album Finally Famous, in his song Dance (Ass), he says "Drop that ass, make it boomerang/ Take my belt off, bitch I'm Pootie Tang."
[edit] Soundtrack
A soundtrack containing hip hop and R&B music was released on June 16, 2001 by Hollywood Records. It peaked at #51 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and #22 on the Top Soundtracks.
[edit] References
- ^ Pootie Tang at Box Office Mojo
- ^ a b WTF with Marc Maron - Louis C.K. part 1
- ^ http://www.esquire.com/features/man-at-his-best/q-and-a/louis-ck-interview-0611
- ^ "Pootie Tang Movie Reviews, Pictures". Rotten Tomatoes. http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/pootie_tang/?critic=columns. Retrieved 2011-01-30.
- ^ Ebert, Roger (29 June 2001). "Pootie Tang review". suntimes.com. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20010629/REVIEWS/106290303/1023. Retrieved 2011-01-30.
- ^ Rabin, Nathan (2002-03-29). "Pootie Tang | DVD | DVD". The A.V. Club. http://www.avclub.com/content/node/4938. Retrieved 2011-01-30.
- ^ Tobias, Scott (23 July 2009). "Pootie Tang | Film | The New Cult Canon". The A.V. Club. http://www.avclub.com/articles/pootie-tang,30745. Retrieved 2011-04-01.
- ^ Murphy, Kevin. A Year at the Movies, HarperCollins, 2002, p.172. ISBN 0-06-093786-6
[edit] External links
| Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Pootie Tang |
- Pootie Tang at the Internet Movie Database
- Pootie Tang at AllRovi
- Pootie Tang at Box Office Mojo
- Pootie Tang at Rotten Tomatoes
- Pootie Tang at Metacritic
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- [[Beavis and Butt-Head Do America 2
- 2001 films
- American films
- English-language films
- 2000s action films
- 2000s comedy films
- American action comedy films
- American independent films
- American satirical films
- Blaxploitation films
- Films directed by Louis C.K.
- Films shot in New York
- Films shot in New Jersey
- Hood films
- MTV Films films
- Paramount Pictures films