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it's rare that a film manages to be preachy and morally repugnant. tyler perry's temptation: confessions of a marriage counselor manages that rare couplet as easy as drawing a breathe. perry has always been bad with mixed signals in his little would-be morality plays but here he really doesn't bother to mix it up; it's all bad. first and foremost the film is deeply and overtly misogynistic. in one particularly disgusting moment the lead character of judith, played in painfully and embarrassingly broad strokes by jurnee smollett-bell, is subjected to an unasked-for sexual advance. she says no, and she even physically fights the man. the response from the male character "stop. now you can say you resisted." and judith feels liberated in this moment as she gives in. the implication laid down is that despite the fact that she's been telling the man "no" for the first half of the film, it is judith's fault because she asked her co-worker ava (kim kardashian) to give her a sexy makeover. and that's just one moment among many in which perry lays out his views on morality: women who cheat are damned to hell. meanwhile, judith's husband has a brief moment where he nearly strays and the woman who says no is viewed in a saintly manner; she's someone judith should take inspiration from. it almost makes one wonder who he's having problems getting over.
but this is more than just a poorly-messaged film; it's a poorly-written, poorly-acted and poorly-directed one. judith's journey through the film is wholly unbelievable and every character surrounding her is a half-fleshed out archetype created to either lead judith astray or ineffectively keep her on the right path. the dialogue is embarrassingly bad, the plot twists are practically spelled out in neon lights and the performances from everyone involved is best left off of their resumes with the hopes that this fades into the ether. perry has had some lows in his career, but this is undoubtedly the lowest he's sunk. tyler perry has said that he feels temptations of a marriage counselor is his most important film yet. and it is rare that i say this about a filmmaker, because i feel like there's always some kind of good intentions and i look for things that someone can look back on and be proud. but tyler perry should consider this film important, except as a wake-up call. in truth he should be ashamed of this film. it fails in characterization, storytelling, direction and yes, human decency.
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