Vivica A. Fox Reviews

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Je Caryous Johnson Presents: Whatever She Wants

Review Whatever She Wants is the story about one woman s determination to rediscover who she really is... Vivian Wolf (Vivica A. Fox) has suffered one heartbreak too many and has no room left for unfulfilling relationships. Now she has come up with the solution to every woman s problem, a private club called Whatever She Wants where men have to qualify to get in.
Je'Caryous Johnson's Cheaper To Keep Her

Review Three married couples trying to spice up their marriages go on a retreat run by a sexy psychologist and her handsome husband at a tranquil Malibu estate. Encouraged to share their innermost feelings, the fun begins when secrets are revealed and hearts are challenged. How far will each couple go to save their marriage?
Je'Caryous Johnson's Marriage Material

Review Welcome to the new players club where everyone's in on the game! Vivica A. Fox, Carmen Electra, and Stacy Dash star as three smart and sexy friends fed up with being played by the men in their lives. To prove that all men are predictable and easily seduced, this hot trio decides to play by a new set of rules. They enter into a wild contest of seduction to convince one lucky man that he's living a dream... but what the girls don't realize is that their mark is in onto their game and he's got a few plays of his own.
Je'Caryous Johnson Presents: 3 Ways to Get a Husband

Review Sassy ad exec Vivica A. Fox seems to have her pulse on the opposite sex, espousing advice to her three friends and keeping attorney boyfriend Morris Chestnut in line. Trouble starts, however, when Chestnut is seen dancing with another gal in a restaurant, which puts Fox on the warpath. She initiates a 10-day plan that will have any man crawling back to his lady and getting his act together. Anthony Anderson, Mo'Nique and Tamala Jones also star. 90 min. Standard and Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital stereo Surround; Subtitles: English, Chinese, French, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Thai; audio commentary; "making of" featurette; filmographies; music video; theatrical trailers.
Je'Caryous Johnson's Love Overboard

Review In reducing the rules of romance to a 10-day plan for repairing a breakup, Two Can Play That Game tickles a few funny bones while "keepin' it real" about heartbreak and human behavior. Our hostess through this marathon of head games is 28-year-old Shanté (Vivica A. Fox--emphasis on the fox), who speaks to the camera so much that critic Roger Ebert nicknamed this movie "Waiting to Inhale." In a film packed with positive stereotypes (no crack-smoking gangstas here, thank you), she's a successful marketing executive, and her straying boyfriend is a high-profile attorney (Morris Chestnut). Their turbulent romance survives Shanté's 10-day power play, but not all viewers will be so lucky, since this movie is alternately charming and aggravating, and there's precious little romance while the lovers are plotting their moves. Still, it's a safe bet that many people will appreciate this movie's endearing lesson--namely, that sincere groveling can save you lots of time and heartache. --Jeff Shannon
David E. Talbert's Love in the Nick of Tyme

Review Motives is a hot, sexy, erotic, urban thriller that centers around a highly educated and successful business tycoon who is married to the quintessential wife. Things go dangerously awry when he engages in an adulterous fling. When a violent murder forces police to probe into his situation, they uncover a labyrinth of deception, agendas and motives, where the stakes are enormous and nothing is as it seems. Shemar Moore (The Brothers) and Vivica A. Fox (Ride or Die, Two Can Play That Game).
Marriage Chronicles

Review An FBI agent devoted to finding missing people... A young psychic with visions of the lost... To find the nation's most eluisve missing persons and bring them home, they won't need just five senses, they'll need 6. From Lifetime comes the thrilling ori
Dysfunctional Friends

Review In this sequel to "Love Chronicles," a DJ copes with his troubled marriage by talking about his problems with callers to his radio show. Through the stories and advice of his listeners, he begins to rekindle his desire for wife--learning about the various ways that people love in the process. Smart and sexy urban drama stars Vivica A. Fox, Ving Rhames, Elise Neal, and Mike Epps. AKA: "Love Chronicles II." 90 min. Soundtrack: English.
David E. Talbert's What Goes Around Comes Around

Review When the wife of a prominent Haitian
doctor comes up missing, the focus
immediately turns on her husband.
The plot thickens when a beautiful
detective (Vivica A. Fox) assigned to
the case is led to believe that the wife
was the victim of a powerful Haitian
Voodoo priest (Obba Babatundé). But
nothing is as it seems in this complex
psychological thriller that delves into
the dark world of Voodoo, deception,
and the fragility of the mind.
Church Girl

Review In the tradition of Women Thou Art Loosed, "Cover" will engross you in a gripping tale of lies, betrayal and infidelity. Vivica A. Fox and Aunjuane Ellis headline an all-star cast in this suspenseful account of a devoted wife and mother accused of murder.
He's Mine Not Yours

Review Lord, All Men Can’t Be Dogs is a riveting story of the lives of two people, Lisa and Tim Johnson, whose struggles are closely tied with the four spirits that reside in their home. It’s a story of temptation, greed and finally, deliverance, mixed with just the right amount of humor! This show will keep you on the edge of your seat, saying, “Lord, All Men Can’t be Dogs!”
Black Butterfly

Review Whatever She Wants is the story about one woman s determination to rediscover who she really is... Vivian Wolf (Vivica A. Fox) has suffered one heartbreak too many and has no room left for unfulfilling relationships. Now she has come up with the solution to every woman s problem, a private club called Whatever She Wants where men have to qualify to get in.
Getting Played

Review Three married couples trying to spice up their marriages go on a retreat run by a sexy psychologist and her handsome husband at a tranquil Malibu estate. Encouraged to share their innermost feelings, the fun begins when secrets are revealed and hearts are challenged. How far will each couple go to save their marriage?
Three Can Play That Game

Review Welcome to the new players club where everyone's in on the game! Vivica A. Fox, Carmen Electra, and Stacy Dash star as three smart and sexy friends fed up with being played by the men in their lives. To prove that all men are predictable and easily seduced, this hot trio decides to play by a new set of rules. They enter into a wild contest of seduction to convince one lucky man that he's living a dream... but what the girls don't realize is that their mark is in onto their game and he's got a few plays of his own.
Two Can Play That Game

Review Sassy ad exec Vivica A. Fox seems to have her pulse on the opposite sex, espousing advice to her three friends and keeping attorney boyfriend Morris Chestnut in line. Trouble starts, however, when Chestnut is seen dancing with another gal in a restaurant, which puts Fox on the warpath. She initiates a 10-day plan that will have any man crawling back to his lady and getting his act together. Anthony Anderson, Mo'Nique and Tamala Jones also star. 90 min. Standard and Widescreen (Enhanced); Soundtracks: English Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital stereo Surround; Subtitles: English, Chinese, French, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Thai; audio commentary; "making of" featurette; filmographies; music video; theatrical trailers.
How to Be a Player

Review In reducing the rules of romance to a 10-day plan for repairing a breakup, Two Can Play That Game tickles a few funny bones while "keepin' it real" about heartbreak and human behavior. Our hostess through this marathon of head games is 28-year-old Shanté (Vivica A. Fox--emphasis on the fox), who speaks to the camera so much that critic Roger Ebert nicknamed this movie "Waiting to Inhale." In a film packed with positive stereotypes (no crack-smoking gangstas here, thank you), she's a successful marketing executive, and her straying boyfriend is a high-profile attorney (Morris Chestnut). Their turbulent romance survives Shanté's 10-day power play, but not all viewers will be so lucky, since this movie is alternately charming and aggravating, and there's precious little romance while the lovers are plotting their moves. Still, it's a safe bet that many people will appreciate this movie's endearing lesson--namely, that sincere groveling can save you lots of time and heartache. --Jeff Shannon
Breakin' All the Rules (Special Edition)

Review Motives is a hot, sexy, erotic, urban thriller that centers around a highly educated and successful business tycoon who is married to the quintessential wife. Things go dangerously awry when he engages in an adulterous fling. When a violent murder forces police to probe into his situation, they uncover a labyrinth of deception, agendas and motives, where the stakes are enormous and nothing is as it seems. Shemar Moore (The Brothers) and Vivica A. Fox (Ride or Die, Two Can Play That Game).
Think Like a Man

Review An FBI agent devoted to finding missing people... A young psychic with visions of the lost... To find the nation's most eluisve missing persons and bring them home, they won't need just five senses, they'll need 6. From Lifetime comes the thrilling ori
Two Can Play that Game

Review In this sequel to "Love Chronicles," a DJ copes with his troubled marriage by talking about his problems with callers to his radio show. Through the stories and advice of his listeners, he begins to rekindle his desire for wife--learning about the various ways that people love in the process. Smart and sexy urban drama stars Vivica A. Fox, Ving Rhames, Elise Neal, and Mike Epps. AKA: "Love Chronicles II." 90 min. Soundtrack: English.
The Brothers

Review When the wife of a prominent Haitian
doctor comes up missing, the focus
immediately turns on her husband.
The plot thickens when a beautiful
detective (Vivica A. Fox) assigned to
the case is led to believe that the wife
was the victim of a powerful Haitian
Voodoo priest (Obba Babatundé). But
nothing is as it seems in this complex
psychological thriller that delves into
the dark world of Voodoo, deception,
and the fragility of the mind.

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