That ain't keepin it real!
Daryl Chase (Orlando Jones) has it all -- a fine NYC
apartment, designer suits, a prestigious job with a
Wall Street Banking firm, a runway-model girlfriend
named Chloe Kitt (Garcelle Beauvais), and a
super-competent assistant (Vivica A. Fox) who
anticipates his every need. But for all his worldly
goods and breezy confidence, Daryl's got another thing
coming, in the form of con man Freddy Tiffany (Eddie
Griffin). Appearing first as a sidewalk breakdancer,
wearing the requisite bright orange tracksuit and
busting his moves outside Daryl's swank condo, Freddy
improbably begins popping up repeatedly throughout the
banker's well-ordered day ("This is some easy-ass
shit!," he exclaims, on seeing the office, "Your fancy
furniture and what-not!"). This day and Daryl's comfy
lifestyle are breaking down seriously, and according
to some familiar, if barmy, devices. By the time Daryl
is assaulted by a Mexican hitman and on the run from
the NYPD, you see where this movie is headed: the
out-of-touch rich guy will get his comeuppance at the
hands of his new acquaintance.
Indeed, Double Take is, for the most part, just
what it looks like. If you've seen Bad Boys, Rush
Hour, Blue Streak, or even 1988's Midnight Run
(not incidentally, written by Double Take's
writer-director, George Gallo), you've seen most
everything this movie has to offer -- undercover
missions and mistaken identities, bad cops and
sneering drug dealers, psycho mafiosos and inept feds,
competing egos and big guns, barely-clad beautiful
women and some more big guns. Even the "twists" are
routine: it won't surprise anyone that these nascent
buddies aren't entirely who they appear to be, and
their ostensibly unrelated dilemmas are actually
closely connected.
At the same time, and as its title suggests, Double Take is a film that asks you to look again. And it
does have a few tricks up its sleeve (emphasis on
few). For one thing, it has an unlikely source. It's
based on a 1957 drama starring Rod Steiger, Across
the Bridge, which was in turn based on a Graham
Greene novel. From this foundation, Double Take
lifts basic plot elements, mostly having to do with
Daryl taking Freddy's identity in order to flee to
Mexico, where, he learns, Freddy is himself a wanted
man. And why is Daryl going to Mexico? Here you have
to bear with the script's many implausibilities --
after the Mexican hitman episode, he's advised by a
CIA agent named McReady (Gary Grubbs), who has
conveniently appeared to save him from the hitman, to
go to Mexico. In an understandable panic-- as he
notes, he's a black man being hunted by the cops in
Manhattan -- Daryl agrees. He leaves Chloe and his
credit cards behind and tries to board a train from
Penn Station (that's right, a train to Mexico). At the
station, he spots evil-looking suits everywhere, so
when he (again!) runs into Freddy, who notes right
away that Daryl looks scared: "You got the
NYPD-shoot-a-nigger-41-times-in-the-ass look!" Just
so, Daryl pleads with Mr. Streetwise to help him scam
his way South. At Freddy's suggestion, they exchange
clothes and IDs, at which point Freddy starts teaching
Daryl how to walk and talk "black" ("Put a little pep
in your step!"). The switch allows the actors to
imitate each other's characters: Griffin does the
Harvard-educated, suave and snooty executive, and
Jones acts the foul-mouthed, crotch-grabbing,
gold-toothed fool. The switch leads to a number of
outsized comic exercises, including the challenge that
Daryl issues to a nonplussed dining car waiter, in the
scene running in the film's omnipresent ads: "What!?!
No Schlitz Malt Liquor!? You ain't representin'! You
ain't keepin' it rrreeeaaal!"
Strangely, in a movie that so conspicuously flouts
reality -- there's really not a reasonable plot turn
or believable physical stunt in sight -- this question
of keeping it real ends up being front and center.
Certainly, the question of what constitutes a genuine
"black" identity has come up a lot in mainstream
movies and TV, especially in relation to class
(Livin' Large, Strictly Business, The Fresh
Prince of Bel Air were early, notorious attempts to
ask this question). In its own irreverent and frankly
preposterous way, Double Take expands the parameters
of this question, by revealing that any reality, in
any culture and any movie genre, comes down to a
matter of accepted conventions. What's "real" is
what's believed and accepted at the moment, usually by
the people with the power to enforce what they
believe. The point that Double Take makes is this:
once you throw the conventions out the window, all
bets are off. And then anything can pass for real,
even Freddy's patently absurd interpretations of
events and unlikely master-spy abilities.
This is not to say that Double Take holds together
as anything resembling a realistic film. It does not.
Irreverent and silly, it careens between being a
not-very-suspenseful thriller and a broadly slapstick
comedy, piling up all the usual action scenes,
including the car chase, the shoot-out, the exploding
truck, the assault by a team of sweaty, mustachioed
Mexican border guards (though I will say that,
compared to the last two U.S. movies I've seen set in
Mexico, Traffic and All the Pretty Horses, Double Take may be least offensive regarding such
stereotypes, precisely because it is so
hyper-conscious of them as stereotypes). Double Take
accelerates these predictable moments until they reach
a kind of hyper-real warp speed (Malcolm Campbell's
editing in these scenes is breakneck) and sets them to
an appropriately bizarre, wha-wha '70s-style score by
Graeme Revell.
At the center of all this ruckus are the entirely
unbelievable protagonists, whom Jones and Griffin more
or less keep afloat by sheer force of will and a
decent chemistry between them. While Jones has obvious
mainstream appeal (even if you are sick to death of
those obnoxious 7-Up commercials), the lesser known
Eddie Griffin may be a harder sell for a Touchstone
marketing campaign -- though again, judging by the
deluge of ads, it appears they've reached a strategy).
And Griffin does some with a fanbase who love his
spastic comedy and undeniable electricity on screen,
all underscored by Jones' well-timed straight-man
reactions. That all their feuding will lead to a solid
partnership is, of course, the film's foregone
conclusion. Since Daryl is the one learning the
righteous lesson, to trust his fellow black man, the
film reassures viewers early on that Freddy is worthy.
In particular, he has a straight-up weird but also
adorable affection for a fluffy white doggie named
Delores, who loves him in return. Their relationship
is both cute (repeated shots of her tippy-tippying on
her little toenails) and crude (repeated occasions
where she's referred to as a "bitch" or Freddy's
"little white girlfriend"), a mix that unexpectedly
humanizes Freddy, while again, demonstrating that
reality is probably overrated.