Los Angeles Times

‘Bayou Caviar’ as Cajun hash

- — Noel Murray

As a veteran actor and an Oscar winner, Cuba Gooding Jr. surely had access to resources that other firsttime filmmakers wouldn’t for his directoria­l debut “Bayou Caviar.” He had some nifty New Orleans locations and a cast that includes Richard Dreyfuss, Famke Janssen and Katharine McPhee — as well as himself. But the movie’s still a mess.

Gooding plays Rodney, a washed-up boxer turned trainer, who moonlights as a club bouncer and occasional­ly as muscle for the local gangs. When he ends up beholden to Russian mobster Yuri (Dreyfuss), Rodney calls on his sleazy photograph­er friend Nic (Janssen) to help him record one of Yuri’s enemies in an embarrassi­ng sexual situation.

Enter Kat (Lia Marie Johnson), a local teen who aspires to be another Kardashian. About two-thirds of “Bayou Caviar” consists of damaged people manipulati­ng each other into doing something terrible. The rest covers the aftermath.

There’s a good pulpy story scattered around “Bayou Caviar,” and these actors are more than capable of telling it. But Gooding (who also rewrote Eitan Gorlan’s original script) gets distracted by digression­s and side characters, leading to a final half-hour that’s tough to endure, as a lot of insignific­ant loose ends get tied off.

This picture tries to encompass many ideas: about loyalty, the lust for fame and the slippery slope of immoral behavior. All of that is in the film. It just hasn’t been put in any particular order. “Bayou Caviar.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 51 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Music Hall, Beverly Hills.

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