Los Angeles Times

Many roles but not many laughs

- — Noel Murray

Marlon Wayans channels “Nutty Professor”-era Eddie Murphy in the Netflix comedy “Sextuplets,” tackling multiple roles — some in heavy makeup — while telling the story of a fatherto-be who goes looking for his long-lost family. Wayans plays the buttoned-down middle-class profession­al Alan, as well as his nerdy brother, his incarcerat­ed sister and three other goofy siblings who make Alan think twice about the genetic material he’s about to pass on.

The movie follows a loose road trip structure, as Alan searches for his biological mother and discovers he was one of a set of sextuplets, five of which were put up for adoption. While he’s tracking them down, his pregnant wife is saddled with the conartist sextuplet Ethan, who imitates Alan and tries to grift his co-workers.

Directed by Michael Tiddes (best known for the Wayans horror spoof “A Haunted House”), “Sextuplets” is cartoonish­ly vulgar, though never raunchy enough to exceed a PG-13/ TV-14 rating. The target audience here is families with older kids, looking for something silly to watch together.

But while Wayans plays these characters with gusto, he also treats them with more than a little disgust, making fun of their bodies, their upbringing, their social awkwardnes­s and so on.

The movie surely isn’t meant to be mean. But there’s an underlying sourness that makes “Sextuplets” much less fun than the pictures it’s imitating. The film ultimately suggests maybe Alan’s better off not having a family, if they’re all going to be so grating.

“Sextuplets.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 40 minutes. Playing: Netflix.

 ?? Netf lix ?? MARLON WAYANS, left and right, plays all six siblings in a set of “Sextuplets.” Five had been adopted.
Netf lix MARLON WAYANS, left and right, plays all six siblings in a set of “Sextuplets.” Five had been adopted.

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