What Families Love

Just for Mom

160x600
Disney Baby Little Character Contest

DVD Review: Bringing Down the House

Martin and Latifah rule in boundary-pushing PG-13.
From our provider: CommonSenseMedia
Common Sense Rating:  for ages 13+ Stars: 3 out of 5 (About Common Sense Ratings)
MPAA Rating: PG-13  Studio: Touchstone Pictures Directed By: Adam Shankman  Cast: Eugene Levy, Queen Latifah, Steve Martin  Running Time: 105 min  Release Date: 03/07/2003  DVD Release Date: 08/05/2003 Genre: Comedy 

What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that this movie has some very strong material for a PG-13, including explicit sexual references and a graphic apparent sexual situation, very strong language, a lot of drinking, and drug humor (it's supposed to be very funny that a very dignified elderly lady gets stoned on marijuana). A young teenage girl sneaks out with a boy and finds it more than she can handle when he takes her to a party where people are drinking and doing drugs and he tries to force her to have sex. It is supposed to be funny that Peter's son reads a dirty magazine (that belongs to Peter) and that Peter's sister-in-law is essentially a paid girlfriend for very elderly rich men. Some people may be offended by some of the racist language and stereotypes, but the movie is clear that it is offensive and stupid to be bigoted and cowardly and foolish to be silent when those views are expressed.

  • Families can talk about Charlene's advice to Peter on how to communicate with his teenage daughter. They should also talk about how the adults in their family try to maintain a balance between work and family and how to best communicate to family members that they are the top priority.

In BRINGING DOWN THE HOUSE, Steve Martin plays Peter, a lawyer who works too hard. He is separated from his wife and cancels a long-planned vacation with his children because he is under a lot of pressure to land a wealthy and very proper new client (Joan Plowright). He meets a woman on the internet and makes a date with her, thinking she is a pretty blonde lawyer. But it turns out to be Charlene (Queen Latifah), a convicted felon who wants him to help her clear her record. She not only knows how to torture him into helping her -- she enjoys it. And while he is fuming on the outside, it is clear that at some level, he is enjoying it, too.

This movie falls squarely in what I call the "Cat in the Hat" genre, in which a straight-laced person (A) who plays by the rules has his or her life turned upside down by someone (B) who represents uncertainty, vitality, and taking risks. After A complains about how B is irresponsible and how B is messing everything up, there is always a scene in which A tells B, "I learned/got so much more from you than you ever did from me! This is the best day of my life!"

This is Steve Martin's best film in years. The character and situations are made for him. Queen Latifah is sensational -- warm, funny, and sexy and utterly charming. The script loses its way several times, particularly with a tasteless plot line about Peter's racist society party girl of a sister-in-law. But that doesn't matter much since most of the plot makes no sense at all. But this is still a better-than-average comedy that works very well much of the time. Queen Latifah's wonderfully radiant star quality, Steve Martin's comic grace and Eugene Levy's masterful turn as Peter's besotted partner do bring down the house.



Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.
full star full star full star full star full star Rated by 1 member
Print

Find More About

Member Comments On...

DVD Review: Bringing Down the House

Be the first person to add your comment.

Spring Into Ideas

Enjoy the sun and let your imagination soar.
300x250

The Possibility Shop

300x250
null data...
promoObjectId (null)
promoObject.title ()
promoObject.contentType ()
promoWidth ()
promoHeight ()
promoContainerId (editorialPromo3)
promoCSS (on_travelTips_aggregate)
this displays when the floating stack report is on
728x90
Please log in ...
Close
You must be logged in to use this feature.

Thank You!

Thank you for helping us maintain a friendly, high quality community at Family.com. This comment will be reviewed by a community moderator.

Flag as Not Acceptable?

We review flagged content and enforce our Terms of Use, in which content must never be:

See full Terms of Use.