EyeQ Tech review EyeQ Tech EyeQ Tech tuyển dụng review công ty eyeq tech eyeq tech giờ ra sao EyeQ Tech review EyeQ Tech EyeQ Tech tuyển dụng crab meat crab meat crab meat importing crabs live crabs export mud crabs vietnamese crab exporter vietnamese crabs vietnamese seafood vietnamese seafood export vietnams crab vietnams crab vietnams export vietnams export
Entertainment

SEE NO ‘EVA’

DELIVER US FROM EVA []

Hokey romantic comedy. Running time: 105 minutes. Rated R (sex-related dialogue). At the Empire, the Union Square, the Magic Johnson, others.

—–

THE team of scriptwriters behind “Deliver Us From Eva” obviously expended all their creative energy on the catchy title and then promptly ran out of steam with their noisy, sitcom-ish take on “The Taming of the Shrew.”

James Iver Mattson, B.E. Brauner and director Gary Hardwick (who also gets a screenwriting credit) deliver a smattering of funny lines, but those few moments are swamped by shrill acting, oh-so-predictable plotting and lowest-common-denominator humor.

The shrew in question is Eva Dandridge (Gabrielle Union from “Bring It On” and Hardwick’s “The Brothers”), a hard-charging feminist who uses streams of “$50 words” to verbally castrate any man unlucky enough to cross her path.

This clever, articulate perfectionist – whose work as a health inspector allows her to periodically snap on plastic gloves with sadistic relish – reserves her choicest words for the men her three sisters have chosen to spend their lives with.

Eva sacrificed her own hopes and dreams to raise her sisters – Kareenah (Essence Atkins), Jacqui (Meagan Good) and Bethany (Robinne Lee) – after their parents were killed in a car crash.

In return, they worship her and slavishly follow her advice, which is usually detrimental to the interests of their respective husbands and boyfriends – Tim (Mel Jackson), Darrell (Dartanyan Edmonds) and Mike (Duane Martin).

The men (who, as well as being irredeemably dopey, reveal themselves to be unattractively mercenary in their desire for a slice of the Dandridge family trust fund) decide, neanderthally, that the answer to their problems is to match Eva up with a boyfriend.

Enter LL Cool J ,in his first romantic leading man role, as Ray, a cash-strapped “player” who eagerly pockets $5,000 to seduce Eva.

The man born James Todd Smith looks desperately uncomfortable in his new on-screen incarnation – his repertoire of seductive mannerisms runs to a feverish licking of his lips alternated with the occasional eyebrow lift, which combine to make him look more nervous than sexy.

The romance plays out predictably – although no one could have foreseen the film-makers’ decision to plonk LL Cool J on a horse – and the meddlesome Eva’s grating histrionics and exaggerated facial tics gradually peter out to reveal a soft, sweet, vulnerable creature.

Until, of course, she finds out about the deceitful plot.

Subtlety is a foreign concept to everyone involved in this slapstick production, from the writers who made Ray a meat delivery man, to the director who thinks it’s terribly clever to cut from Eva giving her sister’s husband a tongue-lashing to a shot of her vigorously chopping up a cucumber.