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A THIN LINE BETWEEN LOVE AND HATE
Rating: 
USA. 1996.
Director/Story Martin Lawrence, Screenplay Martin Lawrence, Kim Bass, Kenny Buford & Bentley Kyle Evans, Producers George Jackson & Douglas McHenry, Photography Francis Kenny, Music Roger Troutman, Special Effects Ultimate Effects (Supervisor Beverly Hartigan), Production Design Simon Dobbin. Production Company Jackson-McHenry Productions/You Go Boy! Productions.
Cast:
Martin Lawrence (Darnell Wright), Lynn Whitfield (Brandy Webb), Regina King (Mia Williams), Della Reese (Mrs Wright), Roger E. Mosley (Smitty), Bobby Brown (Tee), Malinda Williams (Erica Wright), Miguel A. Nunez Jr (Reggie), Stacii Jae Johnson (Peaches), Wendy Johnson (Gwen), Tangie Ambrose (Nikki), Simbi Khali (Adrienne)
Plot: Darnell Wright is a manager at the chic Chocolate Club nightspot in L.A. and a player who has several girlfriends on the go at once. He meets wealthy but standoffish Brandy Webb in the street. He becomes obsessed with her and pursues and woos her with all effort. She eventually surrenders to his charms, but soon proves to be obsessive. At the same time, Darnell also realizes that he is in love with his childhood friend Mia Williams. He makes the decision to tell all his other girlfriends goodbye for the sake of Mia. Brandy does not take the news well and begins stalking and harassing Darnell, faking beatings, trashing his car and then threatening Mias life.
Martin Lawrence first emerged with his comedy show Martin (1992-7) and parts in the House Party films, before his career took off on the big screen after starring in Bad Boys (1995). Subsequently Lawrence has maintained a generally amiable output of run-of-the-mill mainstream comedies with the likes of Nothing to Lose (1997), Blue Streak (1999), Life (1999), the huge hit of Big Mommas House (2000), Black Knight (2001), Whats the Worst That Could Happen? (2001) and National Security (2003), where he has created a comedic persona that falls somewhere between Cuba Gooding Jr and Jim Carrey. A Thin Line Between Love and Hate was Martin Lawrences one and only outing as director, where he also came up with the story idea and played the lead role.
With A Thin Line Between Love and Hate, Lawrence seems to be wanting to make a player fantasy and create a comedy about a man with several girlfriends, while in the latter half, he lets the film turns into a comedic variation on Fatal Attraction (1987). Although it is not entirely clear throughout the course of the film whether Lawrence is championing being a player or if he is tapping into the male insecurities that lie beneath it in a critical way akin to Clint Eastwoods Play Misty for Me (1971). Lawrences character certainly seems self-absorbed. He seems to operate on a set of complete double-standards he tells Lynn Whitfield that he loves her, although she is clearly expected to not take such a declaration seriously; at the same time he is seen as exercising the natural right of the man to play the field; and she is seen as being too selfish because she fears having sex with him because of her abusive ex-husband. At one point, Lawrences character even borrows Lynn Whitfields limo to go and seduce childhood girlfriend Regina King. As director and co-writer, Lawrence seems to regard all of this as perfectly acceptable the film criticizes none of this behaviour in any way and the films sympathies clearly lie with Lawrences character throughout. Typically, Lynn Whitfields character is given no other motivation than that she is wealthy and mentally unstable. The highly underrated Whitfield at least gives a decent performance that straddles the vagaries of the character that require her at one moment to be cold and sophisticated, the next vulnerable and then completely unstable. Beyond Whitfield though, A Thin Between and Love and Hate is disappointingly routine in all regards.
Copyright Richard Scheib 1999-2012
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