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Bringing Down the House
Description
Lawyer Peter Sanderson wants to dive back into dating after his divorce and has a hard time meeting the right women. But things go awry when he meets a woman on the internet who happens to be in prison. She breaks out to be with him, and proceeds to wreak havoc on his middle-class life.
Lawyer Peter Sanderson wants to dive back into dating after his divorce and has a hard time meeting the right women. But things go awry when he meets a woman on the internet who happens to be in prison. She breaks out to be with him, and proceeds to wreak havoc on his middle-class life.
Actors:
Barry Lee Youngblood,
Elisa Evans,
Matt Lutz,
Smalls,
Randy Oglesby,
Robin Michelle McClamb,
Michael Ensign
Barry Lee Youngblood
Elisa Evans
Matt Lutz
15 October 1978, Anderson, Indiana, USA
Smalls
Randy Oglesby
Robin Michelle McClamb
Michael Ensign
13 February 1944, Safford, Arizona, USA
Genre:
Comedy
Country:
United States
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January 06, 2004
If you've seen the commercials for Bringing Down the House, you already know the movie's best moments and most memorable lines...
May 12, 2012
Everything about this film is painfully familiar, except, perhaps, for the vicious-but-comic catfight between Latifah and Missi Pyle, who plays a high-society gold digger.
Denver Rocky Mountain News
March 14, 2003
A comedy constructed from tapped-out ideas.
October 07, 2003
Irreverent but perhaps not funny enough, "Bringing Down the House" gives Queen Latifah the chance to shine opposite Steve Martin.
March 11, 2003
A Film in Which Steve Martin Will Appear in Full Hip-Hop Drag With Appropriate Slang for Not Less Than Six Minutes.
July 26, 2012
It's a wheezing, rusted machine of cheap jokes, cartoon performances, and crummy plotting, using shock value and insensitivity to make its painfully unfunny points.
New York Daily News
April 22, 2003
A comedy that successfully plays with stereotypes, both racial and personal.
Common Sense Media
December 22, 2010
Martin and Latifah rule in boundary-pushing PG-13.
New York Magazine/Vulture
March 09, 2003
The material is thin and pandering and almost criminally negligent in bypassing opportunities for humor.
April 29, 2009
You're better off ignoring this junk and saving your time.
Ebert & Roeper
March 18, 2003
You have somebody as smart as Steve Martin, and as smart and appealing as Queen Latifah in a movie like this. To have such an awful, offensive story is a real disappointment.
March 07, 2003
It's a sorry situation when actors as talented and funny as Queen Latifah and Steve Martin waste their efforts in an offensive exercise that feels like a bad sitcom.

