Ernest Afrikassa (Video 1997)

54K
Share
Copy the link

Ernest Afrikassa (Video 1997). Ernest Afrikassa: Directed by John R. Cherry III. With Jim Varney, Linda Kash, Jamie Bartlett, Clare Marshall. Diamond smugglers kidnap the girl of his dreams, and Ernest P. Worrell goes to Africa to confront them and rescue her.

“Actually feel quite bad for saying this and criticising u0026#39;Ernest Goes to Africau0026#39;, because this is coming from somebody, who while acknowledging that they had faults and were not great films, actually enjoyed most of the u0026#39;Ernestu0026#39; films in a guilty pleasure sort of way and made a conscious effort to take them for what they are. Felt somewhat nervous reviewing the film and criticising it.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eMainly because of people getting the wrong idea about me. Am a long way from a detractor, a defender if anything, and actually wanted to like u0026#39;Ernest Goes to Africau0026#39; having liked all the theatrically released films while being a little harsher on the straight to video outings. Regardless of the critical reception for all the films being near-universally negative, while being more positively received by audiences. But partly because of the trend for critics to be bashed, with anybody offering as much as a criticism for any of the films being at the risk of being shouted down and made to feel that theyu0026#39;re wrong, let alone dislike it.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThis sort of attitude reeks of arrogance and has gotten significantly worse in recent years. Usually try to refrain from saying this or bringing this up, but this is becoming increasingly annoying, whatever has happened to respecting peopleu0026#39;s opinions regardless of whether you agree or disagree. It really isnu0026#39;t that hard to do.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eBack to reviewing u0026#39;Ernest Goes to Africau0026#39;. u0026#39;Ernest Goes to Africau0026#39; is not without redeeming qualities, none of the u0026#39;Ernestu0026#39; films, even the weaker ones, are unsalvageable. The best things about it are the music and Jim Varney. The music is full of rocking energy and affectionate nostalgia and really adds a great deal to the action in the film. Itu0026#39;s hard still not to relate to Ernest, the sort of character that is a well-intended serial bumbler with a well-meaning big strong heart but always finding himself messing up without intention.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eVarney is fun and likable in the role, to me there is enough freshness in the interpretation to not make it too tired or endless mugging and his performance does give the film much needed energy. A few parts are funny, personally liked the beginning and thought the highlights were the tribe scene and the character of Hey You.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eHowever, faring worst are the story and Linda Kash. Even for an u0026#39;Ernestu0026#39; film, where the story was never a strong suit, as well as being the thinnest story of the series, the story in u0026#39;Ernest Goes to Africau0026#39; is the series at its dumbest, most muddled and dullest, with a real lack of momentum due to some scenes (such as the over-stretched and poorly staged chases) going on for far too long. Complete with a ludicrously contrived ending that belongs more in a badly done cartoon. Kash has the single most annoying character of the whole series, especially in her treatment of Ernest who really did not deserve how she treated him, and she is atrociously irritating in the part.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe supporting cast are no better, with the villains being non-threatening and their actions are silly and repetitive. Varney is the sole bright spot in the acting stakes. u0026#39;Ernest Goes to Africau0026#39; is really not written well at all either. The humour works a few times but they only happen in glimpsing flashes rather than as an overall whole. Nobody expects a sophisticated script in an u0026#39;Ernestu0026#39; film, that was well established with as far back as u0026#39;Ernest Goes to Campu0026#39; (thatu0026#39;s right the one that started it all off) and itu0026#39;s like expecting a porn star to have acting talent. The script however is truly infantile with constant groans and head shakes than laughter, hearing some of it is enough to make one feel like their IQ has significantly dropped.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eLikewise with the gags, which suffer from being childish and contrived and from lack of momentum from some going on too long. Pacing is dull and makes the short running time feel longer, while the direction is just as dull and bordering on ineptly clumsy. u0026#39;Ernest Goes to Africau0026#39; is the cheapest-looking of a series that have always been clearly low budget (though the theatrically released films didnu0026#39;t fare anywhere near as badly as the straight to video ones), the scenery looks fake and the camera work. One doesnu0026#39;t expect such low quality for a film from the late 90s with film-making generally become significantly advanced technically when done right overtime.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eOverall, disappointing and to me the weakest of the u0026#39;Ernestu0026#39; films. 4/10 Bethany Cox”

Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *