MOVIE REVIEW

'Think Like a Man, Too' gets lost in Las Vegas

6/20/2014
BY ROGER MOORE
ORLANDO SENTINEL

"Think Like A Man Too" cast members Kevin Hart, right, and Alani "La La" Anthony, second from right, pose with boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr., second from left, and the film's producer William Packer.

Sequels, as 22 Jump Street joked, are always "the same, only worse."

So any pretense of insight into the battle of the sexes and any real connection to stand-up comic turned self-appointed relationships expert Steve Harvey's book, Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man, is long forgotten in Think Like a Man, Too, the sequel to the surprise hit of two springs back.

Kevin Hart has become the break-out star of this ensemble, so Too is basically a star vehicle for the Manic Little Man — with Las Vegas as the playground for this Bridesmaids meets The Hangover.

This generally mild-mannered comedy sinks or swims on Hart's back. And as one scene makes clear, Little Man can't swim.

Our Think Like a Man couples head to Vegas, where Candace (Regina Hall) and Michael (Terrence Jenkins) are getting married.

Cedric (Hart) has been mistakenly named Best Man, and is spending every cent he's got — and then some — for a bachelor party for the ages for Michael, with Dominic (Michael Ealy), "Zeke the Freak" (Romany Malco), Jeremy (Jerry Ferrara), and Bennett (Gary Owen) along for the ride. Business executive Lauren (Taraji P. Henson) has set up a bachelorette party for Candace, Mya (Meagan Good), Kristen (Gabrielle Union), Tish (Wendi McLendon-Covey), and Sonia (La La Anthony). If only the groom's overbearing mom (Jenifer Lewis) will let her.

Think Like a Man, Too

Directed by: Tim Story. Screenplay by Keith Merryman and David A. Newman. A Screen Gems release, playing at Franklin Park, Fallen Timbers, and Levis Commons.

Rated PG-13 for crude sexual content including references, partial nudity, language, and drug material.

Running time: 106 minutes.

Critic’s rating: ★★

Cast: Kevin Hart, Gabrielle Union, Taraji P. Henson, Meagan Good, Michael Ealy.

Hart's Cedric narrates the tale, which feebly grasps at basketball metaphors to "keep score" as the two ensembles head out into the Sin City night. Cedric nags the groom:

"You've got the rest of your life ... to follow this woman around the grocery store."

And he needles their posse for their lack of party prowess.

"I'm sick of this non-tourage."

Introduce strains in the careers / lives of Chef Dominic and workaholic Lauren, baby-making efforts for "bossy" Kristen and stoner Jeremy, and Cedric's own "we're on a break" marriage." Throw in some weak Vegas cameos (Floyd Mayweather, Drake) and assorted overly familiar gambling scenarios, a funny "ladies lip sync Bel Biv Devoe" scene that is the film's highlight, and a pretty good brawl in a strip club, and that's about it.

We're invited to laugh at the "Uncle" (silky smooth Dennis Haysbert) brought in to distract Michael's obnoxious mother, and begged to giggle at the recycled "Never say never in Vegas, baby" zingers.

None of it is fresh, and Hart's finest moment comes way too early — a no-holds-barred recreation of Tom Cruise's underwear dance from Risky Business — to justify building the movie around him.

Maybe the funniest gag is the actual Steve Harvey cameo, a backhanded slap at just how far one comic/ radio host/ game show host/ author/ self-help chat show counselor can take "selling out." The answer — when your face is on a slot machine.