Boat Trip (R) ½

Review Date: March 21st, 2003

Two dimwitted straight guys looking for love set sail for the Caribbean on a cruise, finding out too late that the passengers are gay in more ways than one.

Story

After wrecking things with his fiancée Felicia (Vivica A. Fox), Jerry (Cuba Gooding, Jr) decides to book a cruise with his best friend Nick (Horatio Sanz) to find love and romance on the high seas. But when Nick inadvertently ticks off the travel agent, he exacts revenge by booking the straight pals on a gay ship. Once aboard and stuck at sea, Nick, desperate to escape, aims a flare gun at a passing helicopter so they can airlift them back to heterosexual land. Instead he causes the chopper to crash-land, forcing its 12 chesty passengers, members of a Swedish sun tanning team, to take refuge on the boat. Nick spends the rest of the film trying to sleep with them, but always ends up with the virile, butch head coach instead. Meanwhile, Jerry gets drunk, falls into the pool and wakes up to find the beautiful dance instructor Gabriella (Roselyn Sanchez) performing mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on him. He tries to sleep with her, but she thinks he's gay. Jerry lets her believe this because it allows her to let her guard down, undress in front of him and talk about meaningful things, including how to give a good blow job. But hold on to your visors--there's a twist! Jerry's ex jumps on board mid-voyage to reclaim her man, only to find him singing ''I'm Coming Out'' in a sequined thong.

Acting

The most devastating thing about Boat Trip is the fact that it stars Gooding. Is this the same actor who delivered a mind-blowing performance as Tre in John Singleton's 1991 directorial debut Boyz N the Hood and earned the Best Supporting Actor Oscar in 1996 for the role of football player Rod Tidwell in Jerry Maguire? At some point Gooding's film choices took a wrong turn and a string of debacles ensued: Rat Race, Pearl Harbor, Snow Dogs and now this. As Jerry, Gooding, who portrayed a gay art dealer so eloquently in As Good As It Gets, spends 93 minutes proclaiming his heterosexuality and making really stupid faces at the camera. Although Gooding's character Jerry is a sweet guy, he's also a flake and it's hard to relate to all the dumb choices he makes throughout the film. Jerry's pal Nick is played by Saturday Night Live alum Sanz (The New Guy) who, during his two-year stint on the late night comedy sketch show displayed his versatility and comedic skill, nailing impressions and garnering praise--including comparisons to the late SNL great John Belushi. In Boat Trip, however, Sanz's character Nick, an oversexed twerp in a cabana shirt, is reduced to being the butt of jokes.

Direction

Director Mort Nathan's Boat Trip should have been called The Love Boat: The Homophobic Voyage because it plays out like one of those two-hour TV movies based on the 1970s sitcom. But while the Pacific Princess promised us that love wouldn't hurt anymore, it's as hurtful as can be on Boat Trip's deluxe ocean liner. Take Nick, for example. He just wants a little lovin' from Swedish sun tanner Inga, but is instead chased by the team's manly coach who likes to show off her deep-throat skills on a baseball bat. Not only is this disturbing, it's not funny, which is the problem with Nathan and William Bigelow's script. The humor isn't seamless and you can smell a joke's set up from a mile away. And, unfortunately, a bunch of bad jokes strung together do not a good story make--especially when the script is littered with two-dimensional characters. The most objectionable thing about this film, however, is not its crude humor or its cartoonish stereotypes, but the fact that it actually tries to deliver a moral with its story. Jerry and Nick leave their cruise with the knowledge that straight dudes can actually be friends with gay guys because they can be professional businessmen too, such as doctors and accountants. You don't say?

Bottom Line

Set a course for a new adventure because Boat Trip is one shipwreck of a movie.