Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat (2002)

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Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat: Directed by David Raynr. With Martin Lawrence, Nancy O’Dell, Paul Keeley, Art Cohan. After undergoing a number of personal crises, a stand-up comic returns to the stage for a one-man show featuring stinging social commentary and very personal reflections about his life.

“***u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThere is no bodily fluid, secretion, emission, odor, ejaculate, orifice, protuberance, function or malfunction that Martin Lawrence overlooks in u0026quot;Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat.u0026quot; The word u0026quot;runteldatu0026quot; is short for u0026quot;run and tell that,u0026quot; but Lawrence doesnu0026#39;t abbreviate much else, spelling out his insights into the human physiognomy in detail that would impress a gynecologist. If it proves nothing else, this movie establishes that it is impossible for a film to get the NC-17 rating from the MPAA for language alone. This takes the trophy for dirty talk, and Iu0026#39;ve seen the docs by Richard Pryor, Eddie Murphy and Andrew Dice Clay.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003ePryor and Murphy are genteel humanists in comparison to Lawrence. Clay is a contender. He doesnu0026#39;t rise to quite the same standard of medical detail, but he has the same rage, and the same tendency to reduce the female gender to its orifices and functions. When Lawrence reveals that he was married but is now divorced because u0026quot;it didnu0026#39;t work out,u0026quot; we think, u0026quot;no kidding!u0026quot; His attitude toward women is that of a man who has purchased a cooperative household device that works perfectly until the day it astonishes him by giving birth.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe film is nevertheless funny, if you can get beyond the language or somehow learn to relate to it as the rhythm and not the lyrics. (If you canu0026#39;t, donu0026#39;t go. This movie is as verbally offensive as Lawrence can make it, and he gives it his best shot.) It is funny because Lawrence is a gifted performer with superb timing and an ability to mimic many characters and suggest attitudes and postures with lightning-quick invention. Thereu0026#39;s something almost musical in the way his riffs build, turn back on themselves, improvise detours, find the way again, and deliver.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003enCurious, but the humor is almost all generated by the style. Buddy Hackett once demonstrated to me how you can do Catskills-style humor with irrelevant words and itu0026#39;s still funny because the timing and delivery instruct the audience to laugh. Lawrence raises that technique to an art form. If you read the script of this concert film, I doubt if youu0026#39;d laugh much, because the content itself is not intrinsically funny. There are no jokes here that you can take home and use on your friends. You have to be there. Itu0026#39;s all in the energy and timing of the delivery, in the way Lawrence projects astonishment, resentment, anger, relief, incredulity and delight.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe film opens with a montage devoted to his well-publicized troubles, including an arrest for disturbing the peace and a collapse from heat exhaustion that put him into a coma. There are segments from news programs reporting on these difficulties–not real programs, curiously, but footage shot for this movie. The he launches into a tired attack on u0026quot;the media,u0026quot; as if somehow it created his problems by reporting them. He also discusses those problems, not in the confessional style of Richard Pryor, but almost as if he was a bystander. He moves on to berate critics, which is unwise, because the average audience correctly decodes attacks on critics as meaning the performer got bad reviews. (No performer has ever attacked a critic for a good review.)u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis opening segment is shaky, as Lawrence finds his footing and gets a feel for the audience. Then heu0026#39;s off and running, for nearly 90 minutes, in what can only be described as a triumph of performance over the intrinsic nature of the material. His description of childbirth, for example, makes it sound simultaneously like a wonderful miracle, and like a depraved secret that women hide from men. His descriptions of sexual activities, in all imaginable variations, depend heavily on what can go wrong in terms of timing, cleanliness, technique, equipment and unforeseen developments. Sex for Lawrence seems like the kind of adventure for which you should wear protective gear.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eYou wonder how long Lawrence can keep this up, and at the end you conclude he could keep it up forever. I would summarize more of it, except that a lot of his riffs are about events and activities that cannot tactfully be described in print. I urge you to stay for the closing credits, not because there are hilarious outtakes, but because there is one of the most astonishing credits I can imagine: A thanks to the Daughters of the American Revolution for the use of their Constitution Hall in Washington, D.C. This is the same hall once denied because of racism to Marian Anderson, who then sang instead, at the invitation of Eleanor Roosevelt, from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial. Now Martin Lawrence records a concert film there. RuntelDAT!”

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