Boat Trip

Article tools

(R). The humor gets very raunchy and is definitely not for children. With Cuba Gooding Jr., Horatio Sanz, Roselyn Sanchez, Vivica A. Fox, Maurice Godin, Roger Moore. An Artisan Entertainment presentation. Directed by Mort Nathan. Written by Nathan and William Bigelow. 1:34 (strong sexual content, language and some drug use).

'Boat Trip" imagines what might happen when two straight guys looking for romance find themselves booked on a 10- day gay cruise in the Mediterranean. The result is hilarious because Cuba Gooding Jr. and "Saturday Night Live's" rotund Horatio Sanz play the straights and because writer-director Mort Nathan and his co-writer, William Bigelow, take an affectionate tone while working up lots of outrageous and raunchy dialogue and situations.

Like "La Cage aux Folles," "Boat Trip" is nonthreatening but goes a step further in presenting a wide spectrum of gay men. There are flamboyant drag queens aboard, but by and large the gay passengers are ordinary men. This nod to reality anchors freewheeling shenanigans designed to appeal to the widest audience possible.

Gooding's Jerry wallows interminably in self-pity after being dumped by his glamorous but witchy girlfriend (Vivica A. Fox) until his pal Nick (Sanz) sells him on the idea of a cruise, with the promise that there will be three women aboard for every man. But when the aggressive and uninhibited Nick insults a travel agent, the agent's business and emotional partner (an unbilled Will Ferrell) books the pair on the gay cruise as revenge.

Despite a conspicuous absence of women, the truth about the cruise doesn't sink in until the ocean liner has weighed anchor. Jerry and Nick panic, but things look up for Jerry when he meets gorgeous dance instructor Gabriella (Roselyn Sanchez) and for Nick when the liner rescues a Swedish team bound for a tanning contest in Hawaii. The dozen bikini-clad beauties look like a year's worth of Playboy centerfolds, with the spectacular Inga (Victoria Silvstedt) amazingly responsive to the crass and unprepossessing Nick.

In an amusing bit of casting, Roger Moore turns up as a suave chubby-chaser zeroing in on Nick.

"Boat Trip" is happily a no-holds-barred, all-out farce in which zany complications escalate rapidly and continually. The filmmakers, by and large, get away with all the raunchiness they serve up, and through all the mayhem, Jerry and Nick experience an unexpected sense of liberation through their contacts with the gay passengers. There is the obligatory self-conscious moment when clueless Nick confides to his new friend Hector (Maurice Godin), an effeminate but gutsy Latino, that his shipboard poker buddies, all of them gay, are regular guys, even the cross-dressing pastry cook. It's arguably a moment essential to a movie that is trying to be as mainstream as "Boat Trip" is. But having Hector, in trying to bring Nick up to speed on gay banter, resort to going on about "the divine Miss M" and other things "to die for" is more than a little passe. Even middlest Middle America deserves something more up to date.

Gooding is more than secure enough to go along with the movie's gags, and Sanz reveals that behind the bluster, Nick can be a pretty pathetic fellow. Sanchez and Fox provide sharp foils for Gooding, as does Moore for Sanz. Lin Shaye, as the tanning team's tough, ferociously protective coach, is teamed with Sanz in the movie's wildest and most frantically tasteless sequence. But in its frenetic, good-natured way, "Boat Trip" is indeed a trip.

More articles

Get breaking news | Most popular stories | Dining and Travel deals all via e-mail!

Would you recommend this?

Rate it:
No Somewhat Neutral Yes Highly

Business Blogs

Search Classifieds

JOBS   SHOP   CARS   HOMES

Listings, directories and deals

Apartments
Items for Sale
Dating
Pets
Travel Deals
Grocery Coupons
Events

Classifieds get results! - Place an Ad

Show us your photos

Your best shots

See reader photos of homes, vacations or real estate and upload your own.