Highlights some of the best, and raunchiest, of [Griffin's] humor.
DysFunKtional Family (2003)
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Reviews Counted:63
Fresh:27
Rotten:36
Average Rating:5.2/10
Consensus: The humor is more profane and offensive than funny.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for strong sexual content, language and drug-related humor
Runtime: 84 mins
Genre: Comedies
Theatrical Release:Apr 4, 2003 Wide
Box Office: $2,152,090
Synopsis: DYSFUNKTIONAL FAMILY takes place at the crossroads of Eddie Griffin's stand-up comedy routine and his actual life. As the title of the film suggests, Griffin frequently exploits his family... DYSFUNKTIONAL FAMILY takes place at the crossroads of Eddie Griffin's stand-up comedy routine and his actual life. As the title of the film suggests, Griffin frequently exploits his family experiences for stage material, much to the alternating delight or chagrin of his mother, uncles, and friends. On stage, Griffin recalls meeting his father for the first time, his school days in Kansas City, and numerous beatings he received from his mother. Spliced between these dramatic moments are shots of Griffin walking around his old elementary school and the house in which he grew up. These biographical landscapes make Griffin's performance feel poignant, providing the viewer with the actual settings and characters from which he draws his material. When the film cuts between Griffin onstage and his mother at home relaying the same story--the two versions are often so completely in synch, it suggests Griffin's "act" is no act at all, just a presentation of his life itself. Most of Griffin's performance provides commentary on sex or race relations in the United States, and his exhibitionistic mode of comedy (if he's not climbing the curtains, he's falling down) and profane candor seem to either attract or alienate audience members both in the film and those watching it. [More]
Starring: Eddie Griffin
Starring: Eddie Griffin
Director: George Gallo
Director: George Gallo
Screenwriter: Eddie Griffin
Producer: David Permut, Paul Brooks, Eddie Griffin
Composer: Andrew Gross
Studio: Miramax Films
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Release:
Sep 9, 2003
Reviews for DysFunKtional Family
The cross-cutting feels too casual and is mostly executed in a jarringly random fashion.
It's hard to shake the feeling that you've heard the material or something quite close to it before.
The pacing, the leather suit, the raspy speed rap. Chris Rock and others do it, and as long as Griffin sticks with the shtick he doesn't have much to add.
The special fun of this stage concert film, apart from a lot of mostly good (and mostly very practiced) material, is in how far Griffin erases the line between himself and his public ego.
Offers edgy, irreverent and very funny humor from hot young comic Eddie Griffin -- and provides just enough background footage to help you understand where it all comes from.
Griffin has displayed better timing and wit on talk shows and Howard Stern.
Merging a documentary with a stand-up film is interesting, but Gallo never goes the distance with his material.
If Pryor, whose influence is so obvious here, was the big wheel, Griffin is something stuck between the treads.
You've got to be impressed by the seeming effortlessness with which KC native Griffin works his audience at a Chicago theater, prowling the stage like some big comedy panther and dropping laugh detonations.
[Griffin's] riffs lack enough insight to qualify as observations and the wit to be considered consistently funny.
Griffin claims that using [the 'N-word'] robs it of its power to offend, but such overuse robs his comedy of the power to provoke.
More of this vérité family action would have filled in the empty spaces where laughs should have gone.
No doubt about it, Griffin is a funny guy and a brilliant mimic. But this concert film, like his early life, might best be put behind him.
The comic subscribes to the unfortunately widely held belief that if it's offensive, it's funny.
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