Dirty Laundry (2006) Poster

(I) (2006)

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7/10
Coming Home and Facing Truths in a Laugh-Fueled, Southern-Fried Family Dramedy
EUyeshima6 September 2007
I got the chance to see a rough cut of writer/director/actor Malcolm Jamal's film at the Castro Theatre during the 2006 San Francisco Gay & Lesbian Film Festival. As an openly gay black man, he lends a particularly unique and contemporary perspective on the Prodigal Son parable with this tale of a class-conscious New York-based magazine writer whose discovery of a ten-year old son leads him back to the family he left behind years ago in his hometown of Paris, Georgia. Those who have seen Cameron Crowe's "Elizabethtown" or Harvey Fierstein's "Torch Song Trilogy" will recognize the fish-out-of-water comedy that dominates the first half of the movie. However, the movie gradually congeals into a more resonant drama of acceptance and forgiveness without foregoing the humor.

Despite his bare-bones production budget and a sometimes too facile approach to easy laughs, Jamal has a keen eye for his Deep South setting and especially his characters that manage to sidestep stereotypical treatment. What I particularly like about the family interactions is how Jamal chooses to emphasize the son's elitism that has alienated the family, not as much his sexual orientation. Rockmond Dunbar brings a sympathetic core to the uptight son, Patrick in his current life but Sheldon to his family. However, it's Loretta Devine who shines as his mother Evelyn, a hardened, alcoholic washerwoman who holds her own secrets and rails against her son with fervor. She seizes a great movie moment as she delivers a near-soliloquy at the dinner table near the end. With her foghorn, female-impersonator delivery, veteran scene-stealer Jenifer Lewis plays judgmental Aunt Lettuce with her usual gusto and provides the film's biggest laughs.

Most of the cast is terrific - Terri J. Vaughn's supportive sister Jackie, Filipino comedian Alec Mapa as the overzealous metrosexual friend, Sommore's throaty turn as the sassy daughter-in-law, and Jamal's own performance as Sheldon's straight, dim-bulb brother who runs the local butcher shop. The one major fly in the ointment is Joey Costello who comes across far too flighty and naïve as Patrick's partner Ryan. The film has a too-pat though forgivable ending. In a concluding Q&A, Jamal said he just filmed the production in April and is touring this movie in select major cities in special showings through the summer. He hopes for a Christmas release at which point I say check it out. Jamal is a most idiosyncratic comedy talent.
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6/10
In the South, they smile at you and spit in your lemonade.
lastliberal18 April 2009
Patrick (Rockmond Dunbar) has created a whole new back-story after leaving his Southern family. Back home after being told to take a leave of absence by his boss, Sheldon (Rockmond Dunbar) finds he has a son and his family is jumping all over him for his Northern elitism.

Things get really interesting when Ryan (Joey Costello) shows up, and the family finds out why Sheldon is now Patrick. But, it is still the elitism that bothers them more than his sexual identity.

I was having computer problems and tuned into this while I tried to fix them. I'm glad I did. I really enjoyed Dunbar's performance. Costello was also good, and they both managed to help out members of the family, while they united with the family.

Loretta Devine was great as his momma, Terri J. Vaughn enjoyable as his sister, and Maurice Jamal did a really good job as his brother.

It was funny, sweet, and what I really imagine as an accurate portrayal of Black Southern life.
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6/10
A Delightful Little Comedy
BlackNarcissus6 April 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I managed to catch this film recently and you know what I'm rather glad I did. It's a great little comedy with some cracking one-liners and a fair few laugh out loud moments. For the life of me I can't understand the low marks its got.

The story of an African American guy called Patrick who after a 10 years living in the City gets called back to the small Southern town where he grew up. Welcomed back into to his family, little do they know that he's Gay and little does he know of what he left behind in his home town all those years a go.

It features a great scene chewing comedic performance from one of my favourite actresses Jenifer Lewis as Patrick's snobby aunt Lettuce. As well as that look out for Loretta Devine as his mother who is her usually good self.

The film fizzes with one-liners for example. "You can't make a Soufflé with Powdered Eggs". Said from one woman to another who's having trouble having children.

The film owes a lot to the work of Tyler Perry to my mind and if you like his Medea Films you'll love this. Well worth a look if its at a cinema near you.
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7/10
A Solid 7!
CreoleInDC19 April 2008
Now yall know ya girl is addicted to Black movies. I mean...after watching mainstream television I just NEED to see some Black people doing some thangs ya know?

Well...I rented this movie I thought it was going to be same old same old.

NOT!

Ohmygoodness! THESE CHARACTERS WERE SOOOOOOO WELL DEVELOPED and the story line was so good. This was SUCH a believable movie and all of the dialog was SO REAL! SO REAL!

Wow...I was soooooooooooooo impressed with how they handled such sensitive topics. LOVED IT!

I would give this movie a solid 7 and only because of some really campy dialog about the son's mother. It was very, VERY awkward to me.

Loretta Divine? I think this was the best role I've seen her in since she was strutting her stuff talking bout "Would you like to have dinner with us tonight? It's just leftovers. Collard greens and corn bread, some candied yams, a little potato salad, fried chicken, peach cobbler and a few slices of ham."

This was a GOOD role for her. LOVE YOU GIRL! Rockmond Dunbar, Terri Vaughn and Maurice Jamal did a good job too. Jennifer Lewis? She played the same role she always plays. Bless everybody's heart involved.

If you have an opportunity...I say rent this movie. It was good. Not for the kids though. Just for you. :)

Monica Mingo dot com
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9/10
One of the best dramedies I've seen in a long time
Old_Movie_Man6 June 2008
I just watched the DVD last night. I laughed, I cried, I laughed, I cried, and I laughed again. The characters are so outrageous and funny. The issues and topics touched upon in this movie are so taboo in African American culture that's it's refreshing to see an director/writer take such chances. It has paid off in an exhilarating and thought-proving movie experience. The actors, particularly Rockmond Dunbar, Loretta Devine, and Jennifer Lewis gave superb performances. The movie was about 10 minutes too long though. The ending is terrific. This is a must see. If the subject matter wasn't so taboo to African Americans, I'm sure it would have won more 1st class nominations. Hats off to Maurice Jamal, a gifted writer and director.
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7/10
This was a good film..Loretta Devine did an excellent job
kdx1126 February 2011
This was a good film - well acted, good cinematography, overall decent production values. Loretta Devine (sp?) as usual did an excellent job with the material..her voice and presence are so distinct she stands out in any film that she does. The direction was also solid and I enjoyed it. The storyline with the bisexual father was also something different so points to the director for originality. However, I thought the sister of Loretta's character (she's also a well known actress) was a bit over the top...and I'm sure the director wanted that but he should have massaged her performance a bit.

A good film indeed. This film was a good effort.
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1/10
Falls Flat - Unimaginative and Pedestrian
dennhunt4 December 2007
I caught this at a film festival, and I won't be surprised if it gets pulled the weekend after it opens in its limited release in New York and Los Angeles. It's just not watchable.

This is a disappointing sophomore attempt by Jamal, who resorts to the same old one-liners delivered by stereotypical characters - so wooden and absent of any development that the viewer never quite connects with any of them.

Loretta Devine is good - but not great. I've seen her in far better work. Her skills are out of place with the pedestrian acting capabilities of the rest of the cast and the "phone-it-in" direction.

The only thing worse than the terrible production values is the predictable story. I found myself looking at my watch half way through the film, hoping for the end after I finally realized I didn't care about the story, the characters, or the outcome of the plot. What a disappointment for the black LGBT community.

Save your money - my hunch is that this will be buried in the 99 cent give-away bin at local drugstores.
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10/10
A Real Gay Black film about people, not sex!
pjchatman11 March 2009
Warning: Spoilers
This is an Black gay film. Not white. Not yellow. Not brown. Black. That said – Maurice Jamal, wrote acted (he plays Sherman's brother Eugene), directed, & produced this film, did a outstanding job of portraying a Black American family & their issues with homosexuality, which for Black Americans is more emotional than other races given the spiritual bond with church & home not seen in other races.

This film is about Sherman-Patrick's (he goes by Patrick in New York & his family calls him Sherman) life being upset when he gets news he's a father. Upon arriving home he is confronted with his bullheaded mother, loving sister, resentful brother, & his very self-righteous Aunt. His problems gets worse when his boyfriend follows him to Paris, GA looking for answers (whether Gabriel is his son, & why Patrick lied about his Mother, and his name). This film has some very good drama & comedy, but you have to 'get it'. Since this is not a white-gay, Latin-gay, or Asian-gay film, they won't get it. But I did.

The film starts off, yes, sloppy. We are indeed confused when see young Gabriel going to the airport, & then in the very next scene coming back home from the airport with Sherman. Jamal left the whole period of what happened when Gabriel was in New York until after Chapter 3 (the film's chapter, not the DVD). We, at first, are lead to believe that the family knows he's gay. This would certainty explain why he and his Mom argue when they meet after he brings Gabriel home. We even think he knows who Gabriel is for a minute or more. This makes the beginning feel very uneven, only because Jamal decides to tell us later what happened in New York rather than before – which again made the beginning uneven. But when Sherman/Patrick finds Ryan, his boyfriend, on the porch of his childhood home waiting for him (Ryan thought he was having an affair with another man named Sherman), the cat is let out the bag & the film falls into place, & continues from there. There are other silly scenes, but this is the particular character of the director (Cookie's 'crunch', the triple 'gasp', Aunt Lettuce's four sons) and just shows he has unique sense of direction.

No film dealing with race and homosexuality is going to be 'perfect', but if it speaks to the intended audience than it accomplished it's goal. To Us (Blacks) we don't see Gay films as an excuse to get naked and swear. We explore the emotional-personal side of the lifestyle and not the sexual that most other races tend to focus on.

To quote a white gay person: "'eye candy' seems like too strong a statement considering (again) no love scene, no shirtless scene, not even a muscle shirt... So by any reasonable measure, this is not really a 'Gay' movie." Ahem, Blacks live very different lives, and most are very spiritual. So the Gay experience for us is very different from those of other races. This was Black Gay film; therefore, no sex, no shirtless hunks, no shirtless hunks having sex – that's porn.
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4/10
So much potential missed
ekeby27 March 2009
I agree Loretta Devine is a joy to watch. Even with the sub-par dialog she's given, she works wonders.

The plot is shopworn, but I wouldn't care if it were done cleverly. It isn't, but what really torpedoes this movie is the lackluster dialog, especially as the main character is supposed to represent a writer. I'm not speaking of those colorful explosions of verbosity that occasionally punch through--I'm speaking of all the exposition. All that dialog about who is where and why and how. It's as dull as donuts. The writer missed a lot of potential fun with words, I think.

I also think this film suffers from poor editing. There is a lot of slow cutting, probably for anticipated laughs, but the situations rarely generate the laughs to fill up the time. Not from me, anyway. Truly, I think cutting 15 or 20 minutes out of this film would help it a lot.

The performances are generally good, though I thought combining over-the-top caricatures with low-key realism made for a confusing mix. Pick a style and stick to it.
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10/10
Dirty Laundry...Everybody's got some
smooth_op_852 September 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Dirty Laundry Patrick Davis has made a wonderful life for himself. All the way from Paris, GA he has an apartment in NYC with his partner and has refined his tastes a little. So what happens when you're forced to confront everything you've buried in the hamper of your life? Well, return to the source and deal with it. With the aid of little Gabriel, Patrick returns to his Paris, GA home to find his mother (Evelyn Davis) and sort out the mess that apparently started before he left town. We find out two things: Patrick is his middle name and his real first name is Sheldon. Patrick has a sister Jackie who seems to be not only his confidant but also the one who is best with the kids (in a few scenes she gets the kids and takes them elsewhere while the adults talk--rather fight).

We're introduced to Aunt Lettuce aka "Lettie" who is the loud, hypocritical stereotype during choir rehearsal as the lead singer who showboats her talent she drops by to see Patrick but runs into his Mother (her sister)Patrick tries to adjust to his life in the small, rural town of Paris when he's woken up on a Sunday morning (his 'rest day') and told by his Mother: IN this house, we do church on Sunday. We see Aunt Lettuce again and how she married money, a little argument between Evelyn and Lettuce goes on in church. Upon returning, Patrick murmurs about how Sunday brunch was dignified with Egg White Omeletes and a glass of champagne on the pier at a restaurant he'd frequent in NYC with his partner Ryan as opposed to getting Sunday dinner at a chicken shack with biscuits and various side dishes.

While Patrick is whispering about how dignified Sunday brunch is we see that Ryan has made his way down to Paris, GA and he blurts out one thing to Sheldon/Patrick "Baby", Evelyn is angered about that but also that he was ashamed of his family. Evelyn says: How dare you bring your partner in my house, a white boy...and On a Sunday too? Everyone is initially shocked but they don't focus on him being gay (which I think is interesting but unrealistic because my experience shows me that it tends to be a big deal when they first find out you're gay) but on the fact that he was embarrassed by his family. In the front room, Ryan remarks on how good the simple food is while Evelyn asks him to excuse them while Evelyn and Eugene (local butcher shop manager) tell him about how ashamed he is at his family, Sheldon says: You wanna know why I left? Because I didn't want to wake up and realize that I had become YOU! and storms off The brothers make up after a BBQ (and Mother Davis and Abigail Eugene's wife also have a funny argument I don't know where that falls into the sequence, you have to admit the egg jokes Mother Davis makes are hilarious!) and tings are on the road to recovery. Ryan shines in a scene where he encourages "Pudge" to think Diva and she aces a dance tryout, and in a pie eating contest (at a church picnic) when he and Sheldon/Patrick blurt out the fact that they are lovers (albeit inadvertently and to hilarious reactions of Lettuce, Clarine and a group of church gossips) and they both talk about what they are going to do with their kid.

When dinner rolls around which is supposed to celebrate Sheldon leaving the next day, Aunt Lettuce comes in with her 4 sons (who all look like they'd be in their element in jail--just an observation) Lettuce makes a mockery of the family and how twisted she feels it is hence "airing out the Dirty Laundry" although Evelyn points out that her parents were mean to her and Lettuce was mean to Evelyn and in turn, she was mean to her kids it is in Evelyn's words: That Lion King (expletive)...The Circle..The Circle of Life..." Evelyn then corrects Lettuce saying that if she calls her fat again she's going to "go upside your big hat wearing head with a biscuit". Obviously drunk, but being as blunt as she can be, she accepts the fact that her son is gay and accepts Ryan because she loves her baby boy. Patrick manages to tell the family that they are going to stay in Paris--for a while anyway. The scene ends with Evelyn drunk and passed out

Next scene opens up with Gabe, Patrick and Ryan as a family,then the scene ends with a wonderful quote by James Baldwin I love this movie! I really enjoyed it, although the job storyline wasn't resolved, I believe that it was a part of the exposition that didn't really need to be resolved, because life's issues aren't always resolved by its parties.

Hope this helped you out and enjoy the movie as I have countless times!
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10/10
Dirty Laundry
dmcortiz10 December 2007
Dirty Laundry was hysterical! It certainly puts you in the mindset of a typical Southern family gathering. There were definitely some hints of Tyler Perry influence.

Loretta Devine is always a joy to watch. She carries herself with a great deal of charisma and dignity. Jenifer Lewis is the grand-dam of divas! She carries herself in a manner that dares someone to challenge her authority.

Dunbar and Jamal certainly carried themselves in a very classy, self assured manner. The entire cast was well chosen to give an even balance, varied perspectives, and display of skills and talents.

I am even more impressed by the boldness of the production team to step out as independents and produce such a powerful product. Bravo! Hope to see more from you!
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10/10
Excellent MOVIE
an32329917545 April 2008
I saw this movie twice this morning, love it already. I love the story line and all the characters were in place. I think the writer/director Jamal did a wonderful job w. his first project out the running gate. I'm not impressed by much, but I do enjoy great films. Wish I had of supported this film on the big screen. (I didn't see any trailers on it) Jamal, be prepared for the haters to roll in...jealous because they don't have anything out there and you did it! It's what every household goes through. I know I did w. my family. As my own cheerleader, I left Mn. to pursue my dream as a filmmaker/writer in Hollywood. I had to do it. I to barely speak w. my family...(just my four kids) Sometimes people don't see your vision and their not supposed to. Your dreams and visions are your and no one else's. But if we don't get away to pursue our dreams you you will slowly die inside.

Sometimes we can be our own interruptions.

So I say to you, good job Jamal. I hope to meet you soon and work w. you in the near future.

AN MAYS
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9/10
Enjoyed this movie...but...
gordymac-115 June 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I caught a screening of this movie last year in Atlanta, GA. While the depiction of the Rockmond Dunbar's character was a bit trite, that facet didn't overwhelm the story. Loretta Devine was consistent, delivering a wonderful performance as the mother, and Sommore surprised the room with (1) her appearance at the screening and (2) her dramatic performance in this movie.

This film is full of laughs, awkward moments, and, hopefully, a bit of enlightenment for men who continue to live separate lives...one when with their hometown family and another life hundreds of miles away in 'the life'.

The main character's stereotypical high-voiced, dainty gay man character really bugged me. In reality, most gay men do not act like this--even when you find one, there are seldom two of them in a relationship (as shown in the movie). I'm not sure why the character was written this way, but, it's not my movie...

I hope this film is well received. I will be seeing it again when it is released--not with my family, of course ;)
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10/10
The original "IDEAL HOME"
davisravone28 November 2018
This was such a great movie.. i see why the movie Ideal Home, stole the concept
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