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If someone finds the jokes that went missing from Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins, please contact the studio or the filmmakers directly. The movie has what it supposes to be jokes in the form of brutal family violence, a bit of misogyny, and a scene of simulated dog porn. The last one earned the only laugh from me, but it was more out of embarrassment for the lack of actual humor than out of real amusement. Combining the discomfort factor of being trapped in a domestic squabble that's just about to get out of hand with the desperation factor of a comedy kicking into high gear at the drop of a hat, the experience of sitting through the movie is downright uncomfortable.
That the cast appears visibly bored is no surprise, and one can only hope they did something nice with their paycheck (I would recommend a compensation fund for people who have to see it). Their awkward attempts to force humor out of writer/director Malcolm D. Lee's jokeless script must have been almost as difficult a task as trying to blow up a balloon with a hole in it. As it turns out, the effort is equally as fruitless.
R.J. Stevens (Martin Lawrence, particularly bored) is a popular daytime TV talk show host, whose book and philosophy of the "Team of Me" has earned him a wide following. He has a ten-year-old son Jamaal (Damani Roberts), to whom he hardly pays attention, and a fiancée named Bianca (Joy Bryant), who's famous in her own right for being a contestant on "Survivor" and lives her life as though she's on a competitive reality TV show. The engagement is the talk of Hollywood.
Meanwhile at R.J.'s family home in Georgia, his parents (James Earl Jones and Margaret Avery) are preparing for their 50th wedding anniversary, and his father isn't impressed with the plasma TV R.J. sent them. He wants his son to come to the party at home, but R.J. hasn't been on the best of terms with his family. Bianca, though, sees a possible PR event: Bring a crew to film the anniversary banquet for the show. So R.J., who tries to tell his son that a man is in charge in a relationship, agrees with his fiancée, and the three head home, where lots of surprises are in store for them and little are for us.
R.J.'s family is an unpleasant bunch. There's cousin Reggie (Mike Epps), who, R.J. tells Bianca, could con Jesus (I suppose that's meant to say more (or less) about Reggie than Jesus) and is a lover of women to the point of a pervert. There's R.J.'s sister Betty (Mo'Nique), who's loud, obnoxious, violent and has a thing for her cousin (not Reggie, although he does "accidentally" peep on her in the shower).
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