What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that many of the characters in this
movie are drag queens, although as is typical in movies of this
kind, they're portrayed as non-sexual. Parents should also know
that characters use some strong language and there are some
double entrendre sexual references and crude jokes involving
tampons and a "sit on my face" insult. Characters respond to a
stressful situation by deciding to get drunk and much of the
action takes place in a bar. A character is a drug dealer and
the response to accidental use of cocaine is portrayed as
humorous. A character is a hitman and there is one murder (off
camera). There are fights, mostly comic. A strength of the
movie is that prejudice against drag queens and anyone who is
different is an important theme.
- Families can talk about how we know who we are and how we treat those who are different. They might want to talk about why it is easier for the drag queens to feel good about the way they look than it is for the women that Connie and Carla see.
Nia Vardalos ( My Big Fat Greek Wedding) and Toni Collette ( The Sixth Sense and Muriel's Wedding) play best friends who dream of starring in dinner theater productions of Broadway shows. Instead, they are waitresses at an O'Hare airport restaurant who get to belt out tunes to stranded travelers in between taking orders. After witnessing their boss' murder one night, Connie and Carla have to hide. So they disguise themselves as drag queens and get a job performing in a nightclub.
CONNIE AND CARLA is a traditional farce with the always-reliable gender-switching theme. It worked for Shakespeare, Some Like it Hot, and Tootsie, and if this movie doesn't hit that level, it's way above flops like Sorority Boys and Juwanna Mann. It is a bright and colorful door-slamming farce directed by Michael Lembeck, whose experience with Friends keeps the pace so brisk that there isn't much time to notice the parts that don't work. The plot is nothing new -- Lucy and Ethel would be right at home -- but there are some good lines given maximum punch by a strong cast.
David Duchovny's low-key charm works well in the midst of all of the over-the-top emoting, but it is a shame that the plot requires him to be so squeamish about his brother's lifestyle. The movie's biggest weakness is its attempt to be just too, too good to the last drop, sprinkling self-esteem over every person who comes on screen like, well, fairy dust. This movie is going to make sure you get the message. Like the two main characters, it throws everything at you it can think of, from shameless power ballads to a real old-time movie star. The song and dance routines really are a hoot, delivered with such affectionate sincerity that I dare you not to be entertained. Yet what it does best is what it does most quietly, with some understated humor about how everyone, even a hitman for the mob, is just one showtune away from discovering the transcendent power of dinner theater.
Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.




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