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DVDs > Reviews > Kennen Ivory Wayans > Little Man Little ManDirector: Kennen Ivory WayansCast: Marlon Wayans, Shawn Wayans, Kerry Washington, John Witherspoon, Tracy Morgan, Lochlyn Munro(Columbia Pictures, 2006) Rated: PG-13 US DVD release date: 7 November 2006 (Sony Pictures) By Jake MeaneyThe best thing you can say about Little Man is that it’s not nearly as execrable as, by all rights, it should be. And while it’s really not all that terrific either, it certainly doesn’t deserve the opprobrium heaped upon it by critics and audiences alike. It currently rates a 26 out of a 100 on Metacritic, and holds the dubious 30 slot on the IMDB Bottom 100 user rating list, one position ahead of the infinitely hideous It’s Pat. The surface crudeness and vulgarity typical of the Wayans Brothers’ oeuvre actually belies an inner sweetness that is rather quaint, in its way. Coursing just beneath an endless barrage of scatological piss, poop and fart jokes; an apparently inexhaustible enthusiasm for objects flying into male crotches; and general sex obsessed bawdiness, is a heartening pro-family message, coupled with a screed against the contemporary scourge of broken African-American families, and a vote of confidence for…. Aw wait, who am I kidding here? It’s really nothing much more than fart jokes and kicks to the crotch. Now, the DVD case promises to be “Loaded With Extra Crap”, and I guess the usual array of deleted and / or extended scenes are just that. But the several shortish yet highly informative behind the scenes features here are genuinely intriguing stuff. The amount of work that has gone into such an inconsequential film is supremely staggering. Basically, to pull of desired effect of having Marlon Wayans look like he is a 2’6” little person, director Keenan Ivory Wayans and his crack production team (who, really, are simply all saints for working on this, paycheck or no) had to go out and find, and shoot the movie with, a 2’6” body double, a nine-year-old boy named Linden Porco. Later on, in post production, Marlon’s head would be grafted onto the boy’s body. With various editing and green screen trickery—having Marlon in essence shoot the entire film again with just his head—the effect that results in the film is nearly flawless and natural (well, if seeing a grown man’s head on a child’s body can really be considered natural), if ridiculously time consuming and cumbersome. And so it’s all very professional and well done—but here’s the thing that gets me. Born with cartilage-hair hypoplasia, a form of dwarfism that stunts growth, but allows for proportional development, Linden is an absolute dynamo of enthusiasm and comic verve. Both on set and off, he comes across like a natural. Never having acted before, he basically learns all the lines and delivers them in full in the scenes as they are acted out, and is responsible for almost all of the “Calvin” character’s “acting”. His is the real body and head (digitally removed, in the end—the head, that is) that we are seeing, his is the natural comic timing and physical comedy talents. So then, if he’s in nearly 100 percent of the film, why is his name nowhere to be found on the box credits? Yes, this is a Wayans Brothers vehicle, and yes, I know audiences would rather see Marlon mugging for the camera than some unknown kid from Canada. But I really think you need to give the kid his proper due, here. And then think of what a much more fascinating film this would have been if somehow they rewrote the entire story for Linden—having a nine year old in cahoots with diamond thieves and gangsters, adopted by a black family, something of a quasi-tragic Dickensian orphan, wise beyond his precious years. I’m sure there isn’t a big, if any, audience for something like that. Perhaps it would be even more offensive in some quarters. But I’m betting it would be quite a bit more memorable than Little Man turned out to be. 13 November 2006Related Articles
Little Man (2006)By Cynthia Fuchs14.Jul.06 None of these gender clichés is especially funny, and it doesn't help that Marlon Wayans' face often looks sloppily pasted onto the stunt bodies who do all the running around, falling, and crashing. |
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Comments
That’s a great film :)
Comment by ^^MiTk0^^ from ... — February 13, 2007 @ 5:04 am