Antwone Fisher, starring Denzel Washington and based on the life of Antwone Fisher, is directed by Denzel Washington and written by Antwone Fisher, which is its major problem. Fisher didn�t write one bad thing about himself, like he actually would. Washington includes himself way too much for a one-dimensional character. Worst of all, Washington is too much of a novice at directing to realize that the characters not only need development, but also need to have two sides to them. Antwone, although I�m sure he�s a fascinating guy, but the way that Fisher writes himself is with such pride, he can�t write a bad word about himself. And Washington seems to think that he�s now in the �elite� of the actor-directors and wants to show us that he too can work like that. He wants to show Woody Allen or Kevin Smith or any other actor-director that he�s now in control, so he�s in as many scenes as he can be.
The story, which isn�t really anything to make a movie about anyway, has Fisher (Derek Luke, in an overrated debut film) in the navy and a short temper, something that flares up only once or twice more in the film. He�s sent to see a psychiatrist, Jerome Davenport (Washington), who digs into Fisher�s abusive past, as he�s sent to a foster home. During the present, he falls for Cheryl (Joy Bryant), and advances in a relationship with her.
The one most remarkable thing about this movie is that Cheryl is probably the most multi-dimensional one-dimensional supporting character in a recent movie. We learn a bit about her, such as where she works, which is more than I expected to know about her. However, like Carl Hanratty in Catch Me If You Can, Davenport was fine as a �character� where we didn�t really want to know much about him, but a crucial thing is learned at the end. Also, at the end, when Davenport is spilling his guts out to Fisher, it�s clich�d and scripted, not something that could actually happen.
It�s not to say that Antwone Fisher is boring, it�s just not exciting. With its two parts, the first part being the more interesting of the two, it can�t have a straight flow. Nothing really interested me throughout the film, but I never found the need to pay attention to something else. I wasn't touched at all, how was I to be touched? Nothing grabbing came out of it. How is this supposed to be touching? Because a man remembers his past? I don't think so! Basically, Antwone Fisher is an OK movie. It�s not exciting but not boring, the acting is not great but not bad, and the movie itself is not great but not horrible.
Rated PG-13 for violence, language and mature thematic material involving child abuse.