Review: ‘Cheaper by the Dozen’ has a lot going on

The film is streaming on Disney+. Supplied
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Updated 22 March 2022
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Review: ‘Cheaper by the Dozen’ has a lot going on

LONDON: When you consider that Disney’s latest family-friendly caper is a remake of a remake of an adaptation, there’s a surprisingly fresh feel about this multi-generational comedy. In the 2022 version of “Cheaper by the Dozen,” Zach Braff and Gabrielle Union play Paul and Zoe Baker, owners of a breakfast restaurant and heads of a gargantuan, interracial family whose lives, as you may have guessed, verge on the chaotic. When Paul’s career takes off, the family moves to a fancy new neighborhood, the kids enroll in swanky new schools and each tier of the Baker clan must adjust to their new surroundings.




In the 2022 version of “Cheaper by the Dozen,” Zach Braff and Gabrielle Union play Paul and Zoe Baker. Supplied

Updating the movie’s premise to better reflect the diversity of modern society is definitely a welcome step, but sadly for viewers, that’s about all “Cheaper by the Dozen” does with any kind of confidence. Directed by Gail Lerner from a script by fellow “Black-ish” writers/producers Kenya Barris and Jennifer Rice-Genzuk Henry, the movie can’t settle on a tone — lurching from slapstick comedy to social commentary and back again with unsettling frequency. Credit is due for a willingness to discuss race in what is essentially a kids’ movie, and for doing so in such a frank, honest way — but cracking jokes one minute and launching into stark monologues the next makes for a discombobulating experience.

Braff and Union make for a charismatic on-screen couple, and their cinematic family is portrayed by an ensemble of likable young actors. In fact, many of the movie’s funniest lines are given to the younger members of the Baker family. Somewhat inevitably, most of the kids get only a few minutes of screen time, so they struggle to define any real sense of character. For this movie, much like the family as a whole, there’s simply too much going on to focus on any one thing. But, much like its immediate predecessor (released in 2003 and starring Steve Martin), there’s a sense of harmless geniality about “Cheaper by the Dozen” that makes it the kind of movie you’d sit your kids in front of — no matter how many of them you have.


UK entrepreneur says people who disagree with his Palestine solidarity should not shop at his stores

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UK entrepreneur says people who disagree with his Palestine solidarity should not shop at his stores

  • Mark Constantine shut all British branches of cosmetics retailer Lush earlier this year in solidarity with Gaza
  • ‘I don’t think being compassionate has a political stance,’ he tells the BBC

LONDON: A British cosmetics entrepreneur has told people who disagree with his support for Palestine not to shop at his businesses.

Mark Constantine is the co-founder and CEO of the Lush chain of cosmetic stores, which temporarily closed all of its UK outlets earlier this year in an act of solidarity with the people of Gaza.

He told the BBC that people should be “kind, sympathetic and compassionate,” that those who are “unkind to others” would not “get on very well with me,” and that anyone who disagrees with his views “shouldn’t come into my shop.”

He told the “Big Boss Interview” podcast: “I’m often called left wing because I’m interested in compassion. I don’t think being compassionate has a political stance.

“I think being kind, being sympathetic, being compassionate is something we’re all capable of and all want to do in certain areas.”

In September, every branch of Lush in the UK, as well as the company’s website, were shut down to show solidarity for the people of Gaza.

A statement on the page where the website was hosted read: “Across the Lush business we share the anguish that millions of people feel seeing the images of starving people in Gaza, Palestine.”

Messages were also posted in the windows of all the shuttered stores, stating: “Stop starving Gaza, we are closed in solidarity.”

Constantine was asked if he thought his views on Gaza could harm his business, and whether people might decide not to deal with him as a result.

“You shouldn’t come into my shop (if you don’t agree),” he said. “Because I’m going to take those profits you’re giving me and I’m going to do more of that — so you absolutely shouldn’t support me.

“The only problem is, who are you going to support? And what are you supporting when you do that? What is your position?”