In the new film I Think I Love My Wife, the comic who has won awards and accolades for his raunchy stand-up slips into a quieter humour and, he hopes, a new career arc
In Chris Rock's new film, he plays a moustachioed, bespectacled banker. He is often funny, but just as often serious and self-examining. It's a realistic film adapted from the 1972 French classic Chloe in the Afternoon (Amour l'apres-midi).
In short, it's a long way from Pootie Tang.
I Think I Love My Wife, which opens in Montreal theatres on Friday, is Rock's second time directing a film. The first: 2003's Head of State, a farce in which an alderman suddenly becomes a presidential candidate.
"If I did Head of State tomorrow, it would be more like All the President's Men," says Rock. "It would be that tone, with jokes."
Finding the right tone in movies has been challenging for the 42-year-old Rock. Many of his films - from the underrated Pootie Tang to the Farrelly brothers' Osmosis Jones - have been absurdist.
"I'm in ANOTHER place as far as films are concerned," Rock, with his trademark emphasis, says of the current aesthetic shift. "I wish I had gotten here a while back."
Rock's brilliant stand-up act - for which he has won three Emmys - has always been grounded firmly in reality. I Think I Love My Wife draws from his stand-up material, which has often dealt with relationships and a reluctant acceptance of married life.
"Those are the choices in life: You can be married and bored or single and lonely," Rock said in his 2004 cable special Never Scared. "Ain't no happiness nowhere."
In I Think I Love My Wife, Rock plays a married man with children whose fidelity is tested when an attractive past acquaintance (Kerry Washington) begins dropping by his office. There are definite gags (including a heavily advertised one involving Viagra), but much of the basic plot is taken from the aforementioned Eric Rohmer movie, one of his six moral tales.
"I know it sounds silly. People are like, 'Chris Rock and Eric Rohmer?' But if you study his movies and then you study my stand-up, they kind of go together," says Rock. "We immediately said (Chloe in the Afternoon) was like a great house with no furniture - no funny furniture, only serious furniture."
Rock co-wrote the script with his friend and frequent collaborator, comedian Louis C.K., who has honed an act known for its ruthless honesty about married life. Louis C.K. believes this is a new direction for Rock.
"I do think there are people that will go, 'Why is Chris Rock doing that?' " he says. "But it's actually a lot closer to who he is as a person and as an artist than any other film he's made before. People who are always expecting big (Adam) Sandler-like comedies out of him - they're barking up the wrong tree. That's not true to his voice."
Rock has long spoken of his deep admiration for another New York stand-up turned filmmaker: Woody Allen. It's not hard to see parallels between a typical Allen movie and I Think I Love My Wife, a romantic comedy set in
New York. Rock used Allen's Hannah and Her Sisters as a reference, but acknowledges his film is "so not on his level." Of his identification with Allen, Rock says: "I'm a nerd. I'm a little guy ... the last guy you'd expect in a romantic movie."