Total Recall: Movies Directed by Tyler Perry

We count down the best-reviewed directorial work of the Peeples producer.

Tyler Perry

The critics haven't exactly been kind to Tyler Perry over the years, but with nearly $700 million in lifetime domestic grosses, he's definitely a filmmaker who understands his audience -- and with that audience preparing to lineup for his latest production, this weekend's Tyler Perry Presents Peeples, we thought now would be the perfect time to take a look back at the best-reviewed entries in his ever-growing filmography. Put on your Sunday dress, pull up those support hose, and grab a shotgun -- it's Tyler Perry Presents Tyler Perry's Total Recall!


26%

10. Daddy's Little Girls

Say what you will about Tyler Perry's movies, but he consistently manages to assemble casts filled with excellent actors -- and for 2007's Daddy's Little Girls, his talent included Idris Elba, Louis Gossett, Jr., and Gabrielle Union. Unfortunately, all that thespian power wasn't enough to rescue the movie from critical brickbats, but for a select few scribes, this story of a blue-collar mechanic (Elba) who falls for a wealthy attorney (Union) threw off enough fizzy rom-com sparks to compensate for its thinly sketched characters and exposition-heavy script. "I entered this moviegoing experience ready for a lot of wincing and eye-rolling," admitted Toddy Burton of the Austin Chronicle, "but dammit if this movie didn't make me laugh and cry."


26%

9. Madea's Family Reunion

Given how regularly she tussles with her kin, you'd think a family reunion would be the last thing Madea would want to plan, but that's exactly what she does in Madea's Family Reunion, the 2006 adaptation of Perry's play in which his infamously cranky matriarch finds herself at the center of a fresh batch of poorly timed familial drama. This time around, Madea has to juggle preparations for the titular event with a mounting series of problems, including her sister's funeral, the court-ordered delivery of a maladjusted teen (Keke Palmer), and the personal travails of her nieces (played by Rochelle Aytes and Lisa Anderson). "Let's not sell Tyler Perry short," urged Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly amidst Family Reunion's poor critical reception. "As the vinegar-witted Madea, he's a drag performer of testy charm, but in his overlit patchwork way he's also making the most primal women's pictures since Joan Crawford flexed her shoulder pads."


29%

8. Madea Goes to Jail

Two decades after Jim Varney's Ernest ended up in the big house, Tyler Perry followed suit with Madea Goes to Jail, an adaptation of his play about the pistol-packing granny's adventures in the hoosegow. In court after being arrested for the high-speed chase she led police through during Meet the Browns, Madea gets off on a technicality, only to go on an immediate rampage that finds her threatening uninvited houseguests with a machine gun and clearing a Kmart parking space with a forklift truck. Safely behind bars, she meets up with a hooker with a heart of gold (played, to many audience members' intense discomfort, by Keshia Knight Pulliam of Cosby Show fame) and before long, everyone gets a happy ending (not that kind -- get your mind out of the gutter). That's a lot of plot for one movie to handle, and quite a few critics felt Perry bungled the tricky business of integrating Madea Goes to Jail's drama with its comedy -- but that was a minor complaint for Melissa Anderson of the Village Voice, who shrugged, "As ridiculous as his films frequently are, Perry, a shrewd yet benevolent showman, knows and loves his audience."


32%

7. Tyler Perry's Good Deeds

Like many of Perry's movies, Good Deeds' title contains a touch of punny humor -- its protagonist (played by Perry, natch) is a good guy named Walter Deeds -- but it's also a simple statement of purpose. For this 2012 drama, Perry tried taking a look at just how powerful one good deed can be, showing Walter as a well-meaning but socially insulated businessman whose chance encounter with a struggling cleaning lady (Thandie Newton) sparks a profound change in his life. It's the type of premise that demands a feather-light touch from a filmmaker, and unfortunately, most critics agreed that Perry's direction and screenplay smothered Good Deeds in poorly paced, dully delivered drama. Slant Magazine's Rob Humanick offered one of the few dissenting opinions, however, asserting that "Perry's considerate plotting is deliberate, perhaps even overlong, but with an attuned sense of people's evolving feelings and relationships."


32%

6. Meet The Browns

Another Tyler Perry play that made the jump from stage to screen, Meet the Browns follows the adventures of a struggling single mother (Angela Bassett) who gets a double whammy: first she loses her job, then she finds out that her father (who she's never even met) has died. Far from a mopey drama, however, Browns provides its desperate protagonist with a family she never knew she had -- including, of course, an irascible, linebacker-shaped old lady named Madea. At this point, the lines were already pretty well drawn between Perry's audience and his critics, and for the most part, they stayed on opposite sides for Meet the Browns, although it did resonate with some scribes -- like Entertainment Weekly's Lisa Schwarzbaum, who wrote, "The importance of faith, church, kin, staying off drugs, sharing food, repenting from sin, forgiving sinners, appreciating a good black man, rejecting a bad one, and honoring black matriarchy is enumerated with typical, reassuring Perry broadness."

Comments

Adrian DeZendegui

Adrian DeZendegui

Wow, Tyler Perry has a suck ass career

May 8 - 04:40 PM

Matt Ritchey

Matt Ritchey

Tyler Perry actually has an AMAZING career. HE likes what he does, he has a very loyal following, he makes BANK and he does pretty much whatever he wants.

That being said, I made the mistake of seeing one of his movies. His MOVIES suck ass. His CAREER is enviable.

May 8 - 06:01 PM

Rodschach

Rod Guzman

So he's like another Ed Wood? Meh.

May 8 - 07:28 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

That spot is already taken by Uwe Boll.

May 8 - 11:40 PM

Gage Kent

Gage Kent

agreed

May 8 - 06:40 PM

Jamiel Catalan

Jamiel Catalan

So is John Moore

May 9 - 12:41 AM

Joe F.

Jay Gatsby

He's like Michael Bay. 1 decent film through an extremity of mediocre one. Except, I'm curious as to why people like I Can Do Bad. Anyways, it is a pleasure to see he has one decent film.

-James Gatz

May 8 - 04:40 PM

Dave J

Dave J

Well he does have a faithful fan base which is no different than other fan bases! Just like they're fan bases for specific soap opera shows!

May 8 - 05:29 PM

Joe F.

Jay Gatsby

When I went to watch Madea's Family (long story) no one laughed at all. I'm serious. All I heard was popcorn being eaten.

May 8 - 05:40 PM

Anthony Stokes

Anthony Stokes

Micheal Bay has one really good film in Pain and Gain, Tyler Perry doesn't even have one good movie

May 8 - 05:54 PM

Dave J

Dave J

Then the reason why some go to see Medea's Family was to see Tyler Perry wearing drag! But I'm just saying that whatever the reason people pay money to see him is irreverent when one can't dispute his financial numbers since a percentage of his films have actually made more money than it had cost to make! Perry is still a good investment for it's a matter of when he'll start to lose his cult following!

May 8 - 06:00 PM

Joe F.

Jay Gatsby

@Anthony If you liked Pain&Gain, you must've liked the Rock (film, not actor)

@Dave J Didn't his last Madea film only made like 30 million US, but Temptation made like 51 million.

May 8 - 06:14 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

@Anthony - The day Michael Bay makes a good film will be the day the world ends.

May 8 - 11:41 PM

King  S.

King Simba

I thought Michael Bay got of to a pretty good start with Bad Boys and The Rock (the latter being one very entertaining film and easily his best). Unfortunately since then he's been getting more and more over the top. Rather then trying to improve in storytelling, he's just been increasingly neglecting it.

As for Tyler Perry, I'll admit I've only seen a few of his films but I've always been baffled at what tone he's trying to achieve in them. One moment the scene will be very serious and the next it'll descend into complete slapstick. I mean how are you supposed to take the themes he's trying to tell seriously when a moment later Madea will saw a couch in half or lift up a car from her parking spot with a bulldozer?

May 9 - 02:31 AM

Trenton Ledford

Trenton Ledford

Yes he is just like Michael Bay. All the film majors at my campus said the same thing. I actually like I Can Do Bad. That's the only film I thought was decent. I think I gave that film 3/5.

May 8 - 08:38 PM

John Tyler

John Tyler

Good Deeds, For Colored Girls, Madea's Witness Protection, and Alex Cross = Good IMO. Temptation = Mediocre. Others = Boring.

May 8 - 04:41 PM

David Tanny

David Tanny

This is embarrassing. The best thing he ever did was his cameo in Star Trek '09.

May 8 - 04:53 PM

Joe F.

Jay Gatsby

I indubitably agree with your statement, David TANNY

May 8 - 05:10 PM

David Tanny

David Tanny

Well, at least we agree on something.

May 8 - 05:20 PM

Joe F.

Jay Gatsby

I'm curious. What makes you a Mandingo expert?

May 8 - 05:24 PM

bigbrother

Bigbrother .

I wish they'd have put "directed" in quotes in the title since I'm not sure what Perry does meets the definition of the word.

May 8 - 04:55 PM

David Tanny

David Tanny

He's more of a businessman than a filmmaker.

May 8 - 05:37 PM

Jaxx Raxor

Adam Jones

Mr. Perry's films (and plays) are primarily for a subsection of African American women and no one else. In a sense, it admiral how he ignores professional critics. The fact that most movies coming out of Hollywood still feature mostly white actors in prominent roles makes Perry's movies stand out. I wish he had the talent of someone like Spike Lee for instance but I guess we just gotta deal with it.

May 8 - 05:15 PM

Janson Jinnistan

Janson Jinnistan

That's just insulting to black filmmakers. Yes they exist. Scott Sanders, Malcolm D. Lee, Dee Rees, Ava DuVernay, the British Steve McQueen. Hollywood could, conceivably, compete for his audience if they wanted to. (They don't) And Perry deserves scorn for not using his substantial wealth to finance and produce films by other young filmmakers (this negligence eliminates any good will anyone can say about his success). Perry, and Lee Daniels and the Wayans as well, are insulting in their portrayal of black people.

May 8 - 06:51 PM

David Tanny

David Tanny

Glad you brought up Steve McQueen. One of the best filmmakers working today.

May 8 - 07:21 PM

Alivia Smith

Alivia Smith

thank

May 8 - 09:41 PM

King  S.

King Simba

What about Precious? He produced that film, and did his best to raise awarness about it. His and Oprah's backing of the film are arguably the major reasons why such a bleak film was able to get so much attention before release.

May 9 - 02:03 AM

Andrew M.

Andrew Milito

Seriously? ONE Fresh movie? This guy needs to just stop.

May 8 - 05:30 PM

Joe F.

Jay Gatsby

Tell that to Michael Bay. Atleast Perry has more than 1 fresh film in his filmography (Star Trek)

May 8 - 05:46 PM

Typhon

Typhon Q

I'm actually surprised that theres a fresh one on here.

May 8 - 05:54 PM

Onion Rovirosa

Onion Rovirosa

Sadly i believe critics and general white audiences cant accept films where black people are in starring roles that are not stereotypes of racial theme movies like django and the help or colorful characters like magic black man or whacky friends.
42 and Red Tails are both amazing films about outstanding black people doing outstanding things that are not drugs or jail related, yet they got panned for not being "real" enough. Give me a break.

Bravo Mr Tyler Perry! I feel you.

May 8 - 08:03 PM

bigbrother

Bigbrother .

Glory? Anything starring Denzel Washington and 80% of everything Sam Jackson. The Rock when he actually tries instead of doing video game/kid friendly movies, Morgan Freeman's entire body of work, Sidney Poitier, Jerry Maguire, Monster's Ball and many others serve as significant counterpoints to your argument. In fact I would argue that Tyler Perry's movies are part of the problem you state rather than the solution in that they foment the very stereotypes of what a "black movie" is. Red Tails was an alright movie, but it wasn't nearly as good as Laurence Fishburne's far superior The Tuskegee Airman which received a much better critical response and 42 has done very well for itself both critically and financially so I'm not sure what you're talking about there.

May 8 - 08:13 PM

David Miller

David Miller

I'm sorry but it has to be said... Boyz n the Hood completely invalidates your argument. Also, how is Django a stereotypical movie? I'm not saying that there aren't any movies that don't handle race bad (lots of them handle it TERRIBLY) but it doesn't mean that people don't like movies starring black critics. Hell, Spill.com is a place I go to for some funny reviews and two of their 5 critics are black and even they don't like Perry. He just isn't very good.

May 8 - 09:10 PM

Matt Ritchey

Matt Ritchey

I'll go ahead and admit that I only saw TEMPTATION, but that movie couldn't have had more negative racial and gender stereotypes in it if it tried. And more importantly, IT SUCKED. I don't care if it's an all-Asian cast doing a shot-for-shot re=enactment of MAMA MIA, if a movie is bad, it's BAD. There's only so long you can judge things based on racial misunderstanding or subjugation..... plenty of all-white films are terrible as well. PLENTY. And aside from negative implications about women, TEMPTATION had REALLY boring stereotypical characters (the boyfriend who works as a pharmacist has to have glasses and be quaint and geeky, even though the actor looks like an Adonis and OBVIOUSLY is miscast), predictable plot, poor dialogue, and terrible directing with bad framing. "Films for a _______ audience" is also just a very easy shield to hide behind and say "You don't understand and won't accept it" even if the fact is that your movie sucks.

May 8 - 11:53 PM

King  S.

King Simba

"Sadly i believe critics and general white audiences cant accept films where black people are in starring roles that are not stereotypes of racial theme movies"

Explain then why Will Smith is widely considered to be the biggest box office draw today, and Denzel Washington is not that far behind? And neither of them really use their race as a major theme in their movies (barring some exceptions like Remember the Titans).

And 42 recieved really positive reviews by critics and audiences. Heck the true life story of Jackie Robinson was arguably the major reason why critics gave positive reviews to the film despite admitting that it played things pretty conventional.

May 9 - 02:13 AM

Justin D.

Justin D.

It doesn't matter what any critic says, Perry is going to do what he does. His fans are rabidly loyal and are immune to any criticism of him and/or his work. To say I'm not a fan of Mr. Perry would be a gross understatement, but I get it; the man knows his audience and what they want so he gives it to them. He's making bank so I can't knock his hustle.

May 8 - 08:11 PM

David Miller

David Miller

Granted, the EXACT same thing can be said about Michael Bay, just replace black women with teenaged boys.

May 8 - 09:12 PM

The Master of Movies

The Master of Movies

what happened to star trek..was he in that movie

May 8 - 09:47 PM

bigbrother

Bigbrother .

Movie's directed by Tyler Perry, he only had an acting cameo in Star Trek.

May 8 - 10:20 PM

Jess Kohs

Jess Kohs

my first thought seeing this link on the home page was "boy, this oughta be good."

May 8 - 11:14 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

I'll give credit to the guy for trying. Nonetheless, his Madea movies are just movies to me. I don't like nor hate them. There are moments that make me laugh, other that just make me go 'meh'. Everything else, "I can Do Bad" is actually pretty good; yes it's corny & formulaic, but something about it makes it watchable to me, plus I find Taraji Henson hot (though not as hot as Meagan Good). I still actually want to watch Temptation, because the trailer was steaming good (I'll bet it's better than the movie), & I'm curious to see what Kim Kardashian did as an actress in it.

May 8 - 11:45 PM

Pat Hipsterkiller

Pat Hipsterkiller

Black Uwe Boll is Black

May 9 - 12:00 AM

Aneesh Raikundalia

Aneesh Raikundalia

seriously any black actor should realize why you are not being taken serious in hollywood: cause idiots like Perry dress up as women to illicit laughs from the audience. Here's what a talented black actor Idris Elba had to say about this "I don?t like all of Tyler Perry?s films. Yes, I did work with Tyler for ?Daddy?s Little Girls? because it portrayed a positive image of a black father. I am happy for Tyler?s success?we need Tyler Perry?by going to support his movies, we need to show economic strength. But we are also responsible for elevating film...I?m not with buffoonish characters like Madea or Big Momma."

May 9 - 12:29 AM

King  S.

King Simba

I'm not a fan of his, but nonetheless I can't help but admire his success. He went from being homeless to becoming one of the most succesful men in hollywood and he did it simply by appealing to an underserved audiences (similairly, I think that's also the reason why Twilight was so succesful, as it was a major movie series that appealed primarily to teenage girls).

May 9 - 02:34 AM

Hugo Emanuel Melo

Hugo Emanuel Melo

Uwe Boll better watch his back...

May 9 - 03:18 AM

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