Norbit
Norbit is a 2007 American comedy film, directed by Brian Robbins, and co-written by, co-produced by, and starring Eddie Murphy. The film co-stars Thandie Newton, Terry Crews, Cuba Gooding Jr., Eddie Griffin, Katt Williams, Marlon Wayans, and Charlie Murphy. It was released by DreamWorks and Paramount Pictures on February 9, 2007. Eddie Murphy portrays multiple roles including the eponymous Norbit and his abusive obese wife Rasputia. Norbit, unhappily married, is reunited with his childhood sweetheart Kate, but must contend with Rasputia and her brothers. The film was a box office success, grossing $159 million worldwide against a production budget of $60 million. It was negatively received by critics and was nominated for eight Golden Raspberry Awards, and also received a nomination for the 2008 Academy Award for Best Makeup. PlotIn Boiling Springs, Tennessee, childhood friends Norbit Albert Rice and Kate Thomas live at an orphanage doubling as a Chinese restaurant called The Golden Wonton owned by Mr. Hangten Wong. They also play-marry each other with Ring Pops, but are separated after Kate is adopted. Five years later, a tough, overweight girl named Rasputia Latimore rescues Norbit from bullies, and eventually becomes his girlfriend. Rasputia grows into an arrogant and tyrannical woman, and they marry each other as adults. She begins insulting and manipulating him. Norbit is also belittled by Rasputia's three older brothers Big Black Jack, Blue, and Earl, working as a bookkeeper at their construction company. The Latimore brothers run a "security business", instilling fear in the entire community except Mr. Wong, who refuses to sell them his business and does not hesitate to use his spear and pistol to intimidate them. After catching Rasputia cheating on him with her tap dance instructor, Norbit insults her and gets chased through the neighborhood. He discards his wedding ring and vents his anger about the infidelity at a puppet show for the orphans. He is stunned to see Kate for the first time since childhood. His affection reignites as he learns she intends to purchase Mr. Wong's orphanage, but he is disappointed to learn she is engaged to a man named Deion Hughes. Aided by his friends and the other townspeople, Norbit meets Kate without Rasputia's knowledge. They slowly reconnect and Kate teaches Norbit to ride a bike. Deion plans to leave town, having no interest in the orphanage, but the Latimore brothers persuade him to help turn it into a strip club. They dupe Norbit into getting Kate to sign papers to renew the restaurant's liquor license in the Latimores' name. Norbit's helps Kate rehearse her wedding, where a kiss between them makes her reconsider marrying Deion. Rasputia confronts Norbit, having witnessed their kiss, and threatens to hurt Kate if he ever sees her again. When Kate learns about the deal from Deion, she confronts Norbit and sees him being imprisoned in their basement by Rasputia. Norbit reluctantly insults her and drives her away to protect her from Rasputia. Heartbroken, Kate leaves and a guilt-ridden Norbit decides to permanently leave town. However, he finds a letter from the private investigator he hired, and discovers Deion has gained $300,000 in divorce settlements from four marriages in the last six years. The Latimores reveal their plan to Norbit and lock him in the basement again. Norbit escapes by bike, crashes the wedding and informs Kate of Deion's schemes. Norbit brings in three of Deion's ex-wives and their children, completely exposing Deion who flees. The Latimores attack Norbit for sabotaging their plans, but the townspeople protect him, having inspired by his bravery to stand up to the Latimores. Rasputia attacks Norbit, but Mr. Wong harpoons her, causing her to flee in pain, followed by her brothers. Norbit and Kate reconcile, purchase the orphanage, and marry under the same tree where they played as children years ago. Rasputia and the Latimores are never heard from again, but rumors say that they open their strip club "El Nipplopolis" in Mexico, where Rasputia becomes their most popular stripper. Cast
ProductionAfter the success of Shrek, DreamWorks co-founder and CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg signed up Eddie Murphy to star in a live-action followup, and they were looking for the right film. Norbit seemed like a good fit, a production in line with his tradition of playing multiple characters in a comedy as Murphy had done before with Coming to America, Dr. Dolittle and The Nutty Professor.[3] DreamWorks production president Adam Goodman brought the script to Brian Robbins and he was excited about the prospect of working with Eddie Murphy.[4] Norbit was the first of three films where director Brian Robbins and Eddie Murphy worked together; the other two would be Meet Dave and A Thousand Words.[4] Murphy wrote the story after going on the Internet to see videos "where really large women, African-American women, would beat up their tiny husbands", a concept which he found hilarious. Although Norbit was always intended to be a comedy, early drafts of the script were much darker.[5] According to Thandie Newton, during filming, the stand-ins were very convincing, and she frequently filmed scenes with them instead of Murphy.[5] The various prosthetic makeups, bodysuits, and wigs were created by Rick Baker and his company Cinovation. Baker praised Murphy saying "He really makes the stuff come to life, and he never complains. When we did 'The Nutty Professor' [...], he spent 80-odd days in the makeup chair. As much as I love makeup, even I would have been complaining by the end, but Eddie didn't."[6] Rick Baker wanted to work from a real life model and auditioned over a hundred extra large ladies, all with the necessary proportions. The model also needed to be able to dance. After several rounds of auditions, one lady was chosen as the life model for Rasputia and a foam latex suit was created based on her measurements. The suit's surface was painted with silicone to make it look like skin. Silicone was also used to make matching gloves. The shape of Murphy's face was changed using foam latex and pieces of silicone, which were then painted over in various tones of red, brown and yellow to create realistic looking skin tone.[7] A body double was used for some scenes, particularly the water park. Murphy with his face in makeup as Rasputia performed against green screen and his head was digitally composited onto the body double.[8] ReceptionCritical responseOn Rotten Tomatoes Norbit has an approval rating of 9% based on 123 reviews with an average rating of 3.6/10, with the site's consensus reading, "Coming off his Oscar-nominated performance in Dreamgirls, the talented-but-inconsistent Eddie Murphy plays three roles in Norbit, a cruel, crass, stereotype-filled comedy that's more depressing than funny."[9] Metacritic gave the movie a score of 27 out of 100, based on reviews from 26 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[10] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film a B grade, with under eighteens (28% of those surveyed) giving it a B+ grade.[11] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle gave the movie a positive review, suggesting that Norbit might help Murphy's chances of winning an Oscar for his role in Dreamgirls, saying that his work playing three distinct characters in Norbit is more impressive than anything he did in Dreamgirls.[12] Others suggested it might hurt his chances.[13][14][15] Ultimately, Alan Arkin won the award for Best Supporting Actor. Luke Sader of The Hollywood Reporter called it "Racially insensitive, politically incorrect and beyond crude."[16][17] Scott Tobias of The A.V. Club gave the film a grade of "F" and wrote: "It probably isn't possible for a single movie to reverse all social progress made since the civil-rights era, but Norbit, the latest broadside from Eddie Murphy, does its best to turn back the clock" and "hideously offensive black stereotypes are merely the tip of the iceberg."[18] Josh Tyler of CinemaBlend gave the movie a mostly negative review, in which he described parts of the film as "pretty despicable" and stated that "the plot relies on the idea that being fat also means you're a horrible bitch." However, he pointed out that "some of it's also kind of sweet. Eddie's really quite good as Norbit, the character is sympathetic and funny. He has a strange sort of perfect chemistry with Thandie Newton, and that's just not something I would have expected."[19] Liz Braun of Jam! Movies described Norbit as "mostly blubber jokes about how fat Rasputia really is" but said that "the movie is not without genuine laughs. Most of those laughs are generated by the other actors." In regard to the "terrifying" character Rasputia, she went so far as to say that the film "tends to confirm one's worst suspicions about Murphy and what appears to be his general fear and loathing of women. The Rasputia gag gets a little freaky if you think about it too much. And you wouldn't want to dwell on how much Thandie Newton looks like a slender boy in her role as Norbit's true love, either. So don't."[20] Black activists took issue with Eddie Murphy's portrayal of the character Rasputia, calling Norbit "just the latest [film built] around a black man dressing up as an unsophisticated, overweight black woman."[13] Film critic MaryAnn Johanson said it was a minstrel show and called it a "hideous stew of bigoted 'humor'".[21] The New Yorker film critic Richard Brody praised Murphy's performances saying "playing multiple roles, Murphy unleashes, with a sense of painful revelation, a tangle of rage, cringing fear, furious power, and a sense of perpetual and unresolved outsiderness." He rated it 17th of 30 top acting performances of the 21st century.[22] Musician Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys called Norbit his favorite movie in a 2007 interview with the Asbury Park Press.[23] Director Brian Robbins reacted to the negative reviews claiming that "The only films that get good reviews are the ones that nobody sees. I just don't think you can make movies for critics". He also defended his star-driven, high-concept movies’ approach to filmmaking, and praised Murphy's performance, saying that "Eddie Murphy plays three amazingly different characters brilliantly. How could you not praise that? No offense to Alan Arkin, but he couldn't do what Eddie did in 'Norbit.'"[24] Jim Emerson of RogerEbert.com agreed that filmmakers like Robbins should ignore critics, and made note of the ancient analogy about McDonald's and food critics. He suggested that Robbins' films "were neither designed for, nor marketed to, people who pay all that much attention to movie critics". Nonetheless, Emerson pointed out several of the top grossing films of 2006 got both good reviews from critics and gained wide audiences.[15] Box officeIndustry projections expected Norbit to earn about $20 million in its opening weekend,[25][2] and Paramount was projecting earnings of $25 million. The film opened to $34.2 million in the United States, and was Eddie Murphy's 14th #1 box office opener.[26][27] The film earned $95.7 million at the North American domestic box office, and $63.6 million in other markets, for a total of $159 million worldwide.[1] The film was released in the United Kingdom on March 9, 2007, and topped the country's box office for the next two weekends, before being overtaken by 300.[28][29][30] Accolades
Norbit was nominated for eight Golden Raspberry Awards including Worst Picture, and won three awards, all for Eddie Murphy as three different characters.[31] The film was also nominated for an Academy Award for Best Makeup.[32]
Soundtrack
The soundtrack for Norbit was released on February 6, 2007 by Lakeshore Records.[38][39]
Several songs were used in the film which do not appear on the soundtrack album, in order of appearance:
The song "Tonight, I Celebrate My Love" is sung at Norbit and Rasputia's wedding party, but likewise does not appear on the soundtrack album. Home mediaNorbit was released on Blu-ray Disc, DVD, and HD DVD on June 5, 2007.[40] References
External linksWikiquote has quotations related to Norbit.
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