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Movie Overview:
Bad Shabbos is a chaotic, culture-clashing comedy elevated by an unexpectedly brilliant performance from Method Man. With sharp writing, quirky characters, and a madcap plot, director Daniel Robbinsโ latest indie delivers laughs โ even if itโs a bit uneven.
This comedy can thank a breakout performance by the 53-year-old rapper Method Man (Wu-Tang Clan) for pulling it across the finish line.ย
Shabbos is the day of rest for Jewish culture.ย Seventh day of the week, and it falls on Saturday, though traditional Shabbat meals generally happen on a Friday evening. Thatโs the day of the week this family gathers as it welcomes a non-Jewish person into their Upper West Side apartment. Meg (Meghan Leathers), from Wisconsin, is joining them because her fiancรฉ Dave (Jon Bass) is the eldest son. The meal will also include the introduction of her gentile parents (Catherine Curtin, John Bedford Lloyd) to the new in-laws. She doesnโt know it, but Meg is walking into a hell storm.ย

Daveโs Dad Richard (David Paymer, Mr. Saturday Night) is a tad flakey. His over-controlling mom Ellen (Kyra Sedgwick) canโt hide her disappointment that her son is marrying outside their culture.ย Abby (Milana Vayntrub), Daveโs sister, is in attendance with her sadistic, unfaithful boyfriend Benjamin (Ashely Zuckerman), whoโs in finance. That bastard loves needling the baby of the family, the teen boy/man Adam (Theo Taplitz), who canโt keep a job to save this life and has mental-emotional problems so vast he masks them with prescription pills. What could go wrong? Everything!
The very clever and sardonic script by writer/director Daniel Robbins and cowriter Zack Weiner takes viewers inside a Jewish New York City home. The footage starts with what should be a normal occasion, which turns it into a hysterical train wreck of events in about ten minutes. As the members of the clan badger each other, some audience members will relate that dynamic to their own familyโs issues. While others will be happy just to smirk, laugh and observe. The introduction of the outsider and her parents is similar to a white women introducing her parents to her Black fiancรฉโs kinfolk at a meal in their home, on their territory. Thereโs a natural awkwardness as they iron out details, learn customs, innocently offend, apologize and try to build a new relationship.ย ย
Thatโs about where any normalcy ends, and the crazy stuff begins. Thereโs an accident and a crime coverup that leads to scheming, planning and unsuccessful maneuvering. All staged by inexperienced oddballs who havenโt a clue how to be cool and get the job done. Theyโre funny, whiney and neurotic. Denial, blundering and failing to call the authorities compounds any possible consequences. What are they to do?ย
This is where the filmmakers had a moment of genius. Throw an interloper into the mix. Insert the gatekeeper, the doorman Jordan (Method Man). Or better yet, let him insist on interjecting himself into the mayhem as he vies to be the savior, guardian angel and fixer. Itโs a smart move casting a rapper in a pivotal role that some wouldnโt suspect heโd do. Credit the musician for daring to take a clichรฉ role and making it all his own. Jordan is a smart, determined guardian with all the answers: โWeโve crossed the Red Sea. No turning back now.โย

The ensemble of Jewish and gentile family members is universally well-played by the cast. But Method Man rises from the fray and steals the movie. The casting director could have gone in two other directions. Hire an outrageous, eccentric rapper (Lil Wayne, Flava Flav) who would make the role even more nonsensical. Or book a seasoned comedy actor (Kevin Hart, Martin Lawrence) who couldโve milked each comic moment to death. Method Man proves to be a nice in-between option.ย
Robbins has directed several indie films. Notably Citizen Weiner, which is also based in New York. Most of this new movie was shot (cinematographer Matt Clegg) in an apartment on West 81st Street on the 16th floor. But lobby scenes (production designer Lily Guerin) were filmed in a building on Riverside Dr., the same one used for Tom Hanksโ movie Youโve Got Mail. The setup, atmosphere and fated gathering are never in question. Though, Robbinsโ sense of timing (editor Kait Plum) seems off at points. Why does it take so long for members of the gathering to notice that someone is missing? Theyโre in an apartment, not a 12-room haunted mansion! Any extended absence wouldโve been noticed immediately.ย
The filmโs style fluctuates between that of a funny indie, boisterous TV sitcom episode and a wordy character-driven Broadway farce. Which isnโt a compliment, more an observation. Even with that odd mix and some lulls, Robbins hits most of the beats he needs to keep viewers engaged. As a director, he needs more polish. As a writer, his instincts for humor, odd situations, dialogue and characters are sharper. Good enough to enthrall a Netflix audience. Iffy for a theater audience who can easily see the filmโs seams.ย
When the chips are down. When Dave and Megโs families canโt find their way out of a colossal mess, a lawyer, rabbi, Superman, Batman and the Jewish mafia donโt show up. The answer to their prayers, if theyโd thought to pray, is a middle-aged rapper, moonlighting as an actor, playing a crafty doorman who is smarter than everyone in the room.
Method Man helped director Daniel Robbins make his hilarious comedy shine by being the one member of the Wu-Tang Clan who could tie up all the loose ends.ย
Visit Film Critic Dwight Brown atย DwightBrownInk.com.
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