This movie stands side by side with the best of Eddie Murphyโ€™s Golden Age. A consistently funny biopic honoring comedian-actor Rudy Ray Moore, itโ€™s clear that Murphyโ€™s heart is in this project full force. Itโ€™s the best performance heโ€™s ever delivered in a movie โ€ฆ period. The film takes us on a tour of Mooreโ€™s rise to fame, starting with the creation of his Dolemite character (a campy hybrid of Shaft and Huggy Bear from Starsky and Hutch), and his poetically profane comedy albums. Moore mixed profanity with rhyming in ways that have earned him a โ€œgodfather of rapโ€ moniker, with rap giants like Snoop Dogg, who appears in this film as a record store DJ, saying they wouldnโ€™t have careers if not for Moore. Clearly, Moore helped lay the groundwork for the likes of Murphy and his standup greatness as well. Which makes it all the more appropriate that Eddie headlines this movie. Murphy, playing Moore, finds himself very much occupying a prototypical Eddie Murphy movie like those from his early days. Itโ€™s consistently funny and powered by Murphyโ€™s infectious charisma. Murphy is commanding in a way that, quite frankly, I forgot he was capable of. Whether heโ€™s recreating some terrible Kung Fu antics, or reacting uncomfortably on the phone as a studio guy rejects his movie, Murphy shows that he indeed remains one of the greatest screen talents. I must make this perfectly clear: Murphy is awesome in this movie. (Streaming on Netflix.)

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