Dayton Daily News

‘Night School’ makes the grade, but just barely

- By Katie Walsh Grade: Starring

For years, putting feisty comic Kevin Hart across from any movie star would automatica­lly light a fire underneath an otherwise middling comedy. He was the magic ingredient, the spice that would enliven anything. But recently, Hart has been usurped as the secret sauce in any comedy sandwich. The challenger to his throne is “Girls Trip” breakout star Tiffany Haddish, and it was only a matter of time before the two faced off in a war of quippy comebacks. But in Malcolm D. Lee’s “Night School,” co-starring Hart and Haddish, Hart is now the star who needs a wacky supporting cast to prop him up this time around.

Hart characters have become a genre unto their own. He plays men with outsize personalit­ies, hustlers and salesmen who punch above their weight class when it comes to love interests and have a tenuous relationsh­ip with the truth. In a climatic speech in “Night School,” Hart’s character, Teddy, announces “I’m a liar. I’m a loudmouth hustler,” and it’s one of the most honest moments in his filmograph­y. Because we know Hart’s cinematic persona so well by now, what livens up “Night School” — aside from Haddish, who plays his supportive, yet shockingly violent teacher — is the band of weirdos that are his classmates. Lee has assembled a group of beloved comic character actors to surround Hart and offer him some fodder off which to bounce. Rob Riggle, Al Madrigal, Mary Lynn Rajskub and Romany Malco embody a group of hilariousl­y detailed characters that could easily carry their own spinoffs. Malco is especially funny as the conspiracy theory-spouting Jalen, who fires off couplets about the Illuminati and robots so quickly no one knows what hit them.

The crew is what carries “Night School” through the bumpy patches. The writing of Haddish’s character Carrie is particular­ly inconsiste­nt — she’s at once sweet, self-sacrificin­g and caring, but she’s also incredibly tough, battering her night school students with retorts, insults, tough love and sometimes even her fists and feet. You can just never quite get a handle on who her character is.

The film’s identity crisis

“NIGHT SCHOOL”

C+

Kevin Hart, Tiffany Haddish and Rob Riggle. Directed by Malcom D. Lee.

for crude and sexual content throughout, language, some drug references and violence. Check listings for theaters. 1 hour, 51 minutes.

It has an identity crisis, but the supporting characters make it work may come from the six (six!) credited writers on the project. The pace and structure are incredibly strange, and the flailing romance between Teddy and his fiancée Lisa (Megalyn Echikunwok­e) is formulaic and bland. Hart’s on-screen romances always have the same conflict — he’s immature — and by this iteration, it’s tired.

But the night school classmates are what makes the comedy work, and there are indeed some very funny moments. “Night School” makes the grade, but just barely. It still needs a little bit of remedial work.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ELI JOSHUA ADE/UNIVERSAL ?? Tiffany Haddish plays a teacher and Kevin Hart a returning adult student in the comedy “Night School.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ELI JOSHUA ADE/UNIVERSAL Tiffany Haddish plays a teacher and Kevin Hart a returning adult student in the comedy “Night School.”

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