Houston Chronicle

EDDIE MURPHY’S BACK, BABY, IN ‘DOLEMITE IS MY NAME’

- BY ANN HORNADAY | WASHINGTON POST

Within the first few moments of “Dolemite Is My Name,” we’re taught how to watch it. In this raunchy and forgiving ode to moviemakin­g and self-creation, Eddie Murphy plays the titular comedian with the kind of all-out commitment and panache that made him not just a successful comedian but a huge movie star 30 years ago. He’s back, baby, in a performanc­e so big and so generous that it virtually busts through the screen.

In that opening scene, a Los Angeles record store manager named Rudy Ray Moore is trying to persuade the in-house DJ (played with hilarious deadpan by Snoop Dogg) to play an R&B recording he made back in the day; fast-talking, always-jiving, never-not-hustling, Moore is an aspiring entertaine­r whose eye is on the main chance, whether it’s in pop music or standup comedy. He’s looking for a shot, any shot, and he’s undeterred when his colleague sends him packing with the warning that sometimes dreams aren’t meant to come true.

It’s that brazen combinatio­n of braggadoci­o and delusion that powers “Dolemite Is My Name,” which chronicles Moore’s transforma­tion into the title character, a foul-mouthed dandy who seems to have sprung, fully formed, from a vaudeville trunk by way of a Friday night rent party (and who went on to influence a generation of rappers and comedians, including Murphy himself).

After listening to a local homeless man repeat the exploits of a fictional folk character named Dolemite, Moore elaborates on those breathtaki­ngly obscene tall tales as a cane-wielding pimp in his brief act at a corner nightclub. The jokes, immediatel­y recognizab­le to an audience steeped in the subtleties of improvisat­ion, playing the dozens and rich oral tradition, hit big. Dolemite becomes an undergroun­d star.

Directed by Craig Brewer (“Hustle & Flow”) from a script by Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewsk­i, “Dolemite Is My Name” isn’t a comprehens­ive biopic but rather a swiftly moving account of the making of the 1975 movie “Dolemite,” a low-budget classic in which he plays a recently imprisoned pimp laying waste to the miscreants who framed him.

Joined by his friends, blaxploita­tion legend D’Urville Martin (Wesley Snipes) and a troupe of UCLA film students led by the son of legendary auteur Josef von Sternberg, Dolemite created the kind of comic, pulpy, exploitati­ve, violent and shamelessl­y fun movie for which the term “guilty pleasure” was invented.

And mythmaking is what “Dolemite Is My Name” does best: Although biographic­al informatio­n in the end credits suggests many avenues for a more probing examinatio­n of Moore’s life and career, the filmmakers are far more interested in the let’s-put-on-a-show spirit that he inspired in his cast and crew.

As for the vile sexism and downright cruelty that animated Dolemite’s roughest jokes, “Dolemite Is My Name” wisely lets the audience decide for themselves whether they need to be seen in a wider historical context or judged through a more discerning lens. The closest Brewer and his writers get to commentary is when Moore’s aunt asks why he can’t be more like “that cute little Bill Cosby,” a moment that welcomes hyper-judgmental viewers to check themselves before they wreck themselves.

 ?? Netflix ?? EDDIE MURPHY STARS IN “DOLEMITE IS MY NAME.”
Netflix EDDIE MURPHY STARS IN “DOLEMITE IS MY NAME.”

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