
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Movie Name | Honey (2003) |
| Director | Bille Woodruff |
| Writer | Kim Watson |
| Lead Actor | Jessica Alba |
| Cast | Jessica Alba, Mekhi Phifer, Joy Bryant, Lil’ Romeo, Missy Elliott, Romeo Miller, David Moscow, Zachary Isaiah Williams |
| Genre | Drama, Music, Romance |
| Release Date | December 5, 2003 (United States) |
| Duration | 1h 47m (107 min) |
| Budget | $18 million |
| Language | English |
| IMDb Rating | 5.4/10 |
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Honey (2003)
Honey tries to apply for membership in at least three cliché ridden subgenres the nonmusical dance musical (complete with putting on a benefit show), the rise and fall and rise showbiz story, and the urban issues drama. The result is a movie that goes every which way but good, careening from scenes that all revolve around the same character but don’t quite interlock. And so Honey is also a movie unsure not only of genre, but of what kind of bad movie it is: hilarious, dull, or an earnest near miss.
This is what happens when you produce a vanity project for someone who hasn’t quite graduated to B-movie star yet. Nothing against Jessica Alba; she’s cute, she can dance okay, and she was pretty good on that FOX sci-fi show a few years ago. But her performance in Honey reminded me of a singer trying to act and Alba, as far as I know, isn’t a singer.
She plays Honey Daniels, a New York girl trying to make it as a dancer. She’s got a good heart, of course, she teaches hip-hop dancing at a community center when she’s not working two jobs to pay the rent. In fact, Honey Daniels must be a pretty great teacher, since almost all of her students seem significantly more talented than she is. The movie wisely backs away from 90 minutes of Alba busting uncomplicated moves, and focuses on her burgeoning career as a music-video choreographer. And her attempts to save the community center. And her relationship with a nice local boy (Mekhi Phifer, too good for this). And her relationship with the sleazy music-video director (David Moscow) who provides the big break. And her ability to communicate with the dead, go back in time and solve murders.
The problem with this well-intentioned, (very) mildly diverting silliness is that Honey Daniels is a weak center for the movie to revolve around. Honey compliments others on their flava, but she seems mostly flava-free she likes dancing, she likes other people’s dancing, she likes kids, she’s a stand-up gal. Her only character flaws are unacknowledged by the screenplay, she pilfers shamelessly from African-American culture in her dance moves, and she displays a vague naïvete about the kids she teaches (she’s shocked shocked! that one kid doesn’t have someone to pick him up after a haircut).
I can’t really blame her, since the other characters in the movie disappear and reappear as needed for their scenes with Honey. These characters include her love interest, her parents, her nemesis, and her best friend. The best friend in particular seems to shadow Honey at key moments, at work and at her apartment, is barely introduced to the other characters, and is absent for long stretches. For awhile I considered that she might be figment of Honey’s imagination, but it’s just not that type of movie.
It is the type of movie, however, where Lil’ Romeo plays a thug to be redeemed by Honey’s love of dance. It also ends with a big (but not particularly unique) charity dance number, and features a Missy Elliott cameo that may well have been inserted into the film months after its completion. These aspects of Honey hint at the unintentional comedy that could have been or the intentional, even, if they had actually cast Kevin McDonald in the director role, rather than lookalike Moscow. But the movie lacks key elements, such as dance offs, gratuitous sex, and true displays of ego. Alba, for all of her blandness, seems nice enough. The whole movie is nice enough too nice, probably, to bother with. Then again, it does contain the invaluable sight of Lil’ Romeo being hauled away in a police car.
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