NUTTY PROFESSOR II:
THE
KLUMPS
by Gary Susman
IAs good as Eddie Murphy was in The Nutty Professor, with his uncanny
portrayal of not only the large and lonely academic Sherman Klump and his
abrasive id, Buddy Love, but also several of Sherman's relatives, who'd have
imagined that he could stretch the Falstaffian family's two brief dinner-table
scenes into an entire movie? With this sequel, Murphy takes to its apex his
Peter Sellers-like gift for multiple mimicry and for disappearing completely
inside a variety of characters (not to mention inside make-up wizard Rick
Baker's mounds of latex). His achievement here is to create not a character but
a family that, for all its members' idiosyncrasies and disagreements, functions
as an organic unit. Oh, and they're all funny as hell.
Buddy and the other Klumps serve as alter egos for Sherman, who's embarrassed
by his own appetites. In order not to blow his engagement to fellow scientist
Denise (a lovely but stiff Janet Jackson), Sherman uses gene therapy to split
Buddy off into a separate person, but both men suffer drastic side effects. The
collisions of Sherman, his relatives, and Buddy create comic sequences that
build and resonate on enough levels to keep psychology thesis writers busy for
years. The chemical reactions among the Klumps also create a byproduct of
envelope-pushing toilet humor. (Two of the screenwriters are American
Pie's Weitz brothers.) Just as Sherman can't exist without Buddy, so,
apparently, can rich comedy about family not exist without vulgar gags about
flaming flatulence, horny hamsters, and flapping, flabby, flesh. At Cinema
World, Entertainment Cinemas, Framingham, Gardner, the Hoyt Westborough,
Leominster, the Solomon Pond Hoyt, White City, and the Worcester North
Showcase.
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