The Brothers

The Brothers

2001 "There is nothing like a good woman to make a brother want to be a man."
The Brothers
The Brothers

The Brothers

6.3 | 1h46m | R | en | Drama

This is the story of four African-American "yuppies" (a banker, a doctor, a lawyer, and a "playboy") who call themselves "The Brothers". When the playboy gets engaged, the other three friends find themselves having to come to terms with their own issues of commitment and honesty...

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6.3 | 1h46m | R | en | Drama , Comedy , Romance | More Info
Released: March. 23,2001 | Released Producted By: Screen Gems , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

This is the story of four African-American "yuppies" (a banker, a doctor, a lawyer, and a "playboy") who call themselves "The Brothers". When the playboy gets engaged, the other three friends find themselves having to come to terms with their own issues of commitment and honesty...

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Cast

Morris Chestnut , D.L. Hughley , Bill Bellamy

Director

Gary Hardwick

Producted By

Screen Gems ,

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Reviews

vincentlynch-moonoi I have to admit that there are a couple of actors here that I really enjoy. But even beyond that, I really liked this film...both times I watched it.Morris Chestnut is a long-time favorite of mine. There are times that he seems to mumble a bit...and I see that a little bit here...but generally his acting is believable. Shemar Moore...this may have been the first movie I ever saw him in. A good actor. Gabrielle Union gets my vote as the most beautiful actress in Hollywood...and she's good, although she's a much better actress now than she was 17 years ago. I thought Bill Bellamy did a good job here, although to an extent his character was not very likable. Not sure why I've never noticed him before. I like D.L. Hughley as a comedian although he's certainly gone wild with tattoos lately), but I can't say that he was able to keep up with the other actors here. The story line was decent, although having four separate story lines was a bit too much. The story line around Morris Chestnut and Gabrielle Union was the most interesting, and could have been a film in and of itself. The story line with Shemar Moore, likewise, could have been a film unto itself. The story line with Bill Bellamy was clearly secondary to the overall film, and as a result got short shrift. And the story line with D.L. Hughley just seemed vulgar.In terms of supporting actors, Jennifer Lewis (whom many of us recognize most from "Blackish") is a hoot, although I wonder if she is typecasting herself.All in all, an enjoyable film.
Ismaninb Being White and Non-American I am not very interested in black movies. I usually don't care about the characters and their typical problems, which are not mine. So normally I would have turned off the movie and go doing something else. It also helped that the other Surinamese channel showed Trigger Man - real crap.The Brothers managed to capture me though. Not that I found the themes very interesting. No, the secret is the humour. The Brothers does not take itself very seriously. Pseudo-psychobabble was alternated with very funny scenes. Especially the judge, the ex of the lawyer, gave me several good laughs.So today I don't feel like criticizing the weak spots - yes, there were several. I just have to admit that I enjoyed myself. Still, like almost all movies about friendship and relations, it's quite forgettable. In its genre it's good.
bob the moo Four professional young black men have a strong friendship that has lasted through relationships and work – even if sometimes it just means getting together for hoops and then drinks at the club. Jackson has commitment issues, Derrick is married, Brian is out for bodies only while Terry is respected for his sexual exploits. So when Terry announces his engagement to new girlfriend BeBe it is met with a mixed reception – cynicism, disbelief and happiness. As Terry prepares for his wedding, the others are having their own relationship issues that will brings changes to all of their lives.It is rare to find a film about a group of black men where the only clear sight of a gun is in a white woman's purse and is met with a black man asking it to be removed from his house. Such is the overwhelming force of gangsterisms, guns and machoisms in black culture that I felt I was almost duty bound to see a film that tries something different. However "different" is no guarantee of quality and indeed this film is frustratingly uneven and inconsistent. The basic plot offers a good chance to get inside the heads of four men (regardless of colour) and at times it manages to do this in interesting ways as well as providing some genuinely funny and reasonably realistic banter. However for every moment that is like this there seems to be two where it'll head off into sentimentalism, soap opera drama or outright dumb plot device. It is a shame because generally the film is distracting mush that isn't too sentimental but is still basic to the point where it washed over me – it was only these bad moments that stuck in my throat for one reason or another. The conclusion is suitably mushy and is a fine summary of the film – unconvincing, mushy, unlikely, melodramatic but still reasonably fun forgettable stuff.The cast are mixed but mostly match the level of the material by being predictable and a bit unimaginative. Chestnut is probably the best of the cast and makes for a nice leading man – good looks, a bit of charm and the ability to say his lines naturally all help. Hughley is funny and, although he doesn't make a convincing character and is a bit of a caricature but is still fun and his scenes have energy. Bellamy and Moore are somewhat non-events, with the latter very wooden and failing to make an impression on me. The females are generally young and attractive but lack the material served up to the men (which itself isn't that great). Union is sexy but her character doesn't convince and she doesn't know what to do with it. Jones works well with Hughley but Ali, Dalian, Lewis and others generally just hang around with basic lines and no characters to speak of – Ali in particular gets nothing to work with and seems to be there just to draw a laugh from hearing the innocent young Fresh Prince star talking about her "pu**y".Overall then a distracting and reasonably amusing film that has some good moments but annoys in the ease with which it just slips into sentimental melodrama etc. The performances are mixed and none of them really help lift the material to something that could have been amusing and interesting. Forgettable fluff that isn't bad but just generally isn't that good.
BEAUTIFULTIFF82 I really though that The Brothers was a wonderful and positive movie. We as African Americans complain so much about what the black male isn't doing or what he's not being allowed to do, when he finally does something positive what do we do? We don't support him because we're to busy saying what he did wrong and not supporting what he did right. In my opinion the movie was excellent and something i'm sure alot of guys can relate to. I give Gary Hardwick two thumbs up for directing and writing an excellent movie.