Kevin hart can i explain
The film opens with an unfunny party scene shot with a camera shaky enough to make me sick. This is followed by an interminable trip into the comedian's navel. Hart addresses the camera to comment on being called a "LAB," or a "local-ass bitch. To prove that he has international appeal, Hart shows clip after clip of his performances from around the world.
I noted that not ONE of these clips features Hart telling a single joke. Instead, it's him saying "thank you [fill in the location]!!
It goes on so long that I actually fell asleep. When I awakened, Hart's little cartoon plane was still flying to locations to prove he was a big star. Didn't we know this before we bought our tickets?
Why did we need a commercial for Kevin Hart opening a movie we paid to see? The montage continues with numerous people professing their love for Hart, telling us how they found him on the Internet. Even people who can't speak a word of English gush adulation, which reminded me of Murphy's "Raw" comments about foreigners who can only understand the curses in his routines.
I was hoping one such person would ambush Hart in the clips, speaking an unintelligible language peppered with English profanities. No such luck befell me, just more clips of fans and Hart's entourage sleeping on a bus. When Hart finally does take the stage at sold out Madison Square Garden, a stage equipped with geysers of fire he occasionally employs for comic punctuation, I crossed my fingers and hoped for big laughs.
And laugh I did on occasion, because Kevin Hart is indeed a talented comedian. This is just not his best material. These can be hilariously funny topics but they just feel tired here. The movie opens with Hart throwing a party in New York City. He's beset by people who think he has gone Hollywood. Maybe this would have been the time to launch directly into his stand-up show.
Instead, the film detours to venues across Canada from Vancouver to Montreal and scenes of cheering, adoring fans. Cut to Scandinavia and the U. The filmmakers don't bother to include jokes that really killed in these foreign cities, which might have been cross-culturally intriguing. They just cut to rabid adulation, all of which looks pretty much the same no matter what country he's in. Hart is more likable when he's self-deprecating, both in his stand-up act and in the final segment of the movie.
So why does he wait till the credits to show funny man-in-the-street segments in which people don't have a clue who he is? If he had interspersed those amid the admiration, it might have been a funnier counterpoint. His stand-up act is definitely not for the prudish or those who can't take profanity. Storyline Edit. Kevin is throwing a celebration party, but guests tell him that he has changed since his divorce. He tries to explain himself, but they will not let him, so he decides to do a show at Madison Square Garden letting him explain, which sold out with 30, people.
The film also shows performances of his sold-out shows from all around the world.. Witness the birth of a legend. Rated R for pervasive language including sexual references. Did you know Edit. Quotes Kevin Hart : Let's get some fire up on these bitches one time! Crazy credits Extra scenes are shown during the end credits. User reviews 33 Review. Top review.
Kevin Hart delivers as usual with a little extra. While that is absolutely not a bad thing at all, it is to be noted that a bulk of his material comes from 3 main topics, all of which he expands on so amazingly well: 1. He will dissect common relationship problems that most everyone can relate to 2. He will state a certain trait of his character and tell a story as to why he became that way 3.
He will state a somewhat uncommon fear of his and tell a story about the origin of that fear After watching all of his previous stand ups, it did begin to get somewhat predictable because of it's overly unbelievable nature. This is not to say that I wasn't laughing like crazy throughout all of them. When I heard about this special being theatrically released I knew I was going to see on opening night. Now back to the formula; Kevin did adhere to it here and there, but I think the reason everyone enjoyed this so much was because he threw in a mix of tiny little minute segments that had really nothing to do with anything and it just worked.
He veered off a bit from talking about himself or about relationships and he just started talking about people in general and the way we are with one another. In general, I think this was his best one yet.
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