According to his shameful doings, Jamal Jiffiers, a young talented basketball player, has been prevented from participating in the champion, the thing that leads him to impersonate a women personality, Jummana, in order to participate in the basketball champion for women, the thing that brings terrible for him, as he falls in love with his roommate.
An unpersuasive moral journey, with a smattering of laughs, that fails to justify the insulting premise that only a man can help the ladies win at both basketball and love.
Cross-dressing sports comedy has lockerroom humor.
Associated Press
February 27, 2007
The movie is sloppily edited, the gags limply staged, the dialogue and jokes stiff and stale. Even the action on the basketball court is unimaginative and boring.
Movie Metropolis
November 26, 2002
...about as exciting to watch as two last-place basketball teams playing one another on the final day of the season.
Ebert & Roeper
June 25, 2002
Simplistic, silly and tedious.
Radio Free Entertainment
January 15, 2004
Bogus and wickedly unoriginal.
L.A. Weekly
November 18, 2002
Vaughan brings such disregard to the film that its pedestrian on-court action might as well have been shot from the bleacher seats.
The idea of transposing the story to the macho, greedy world of big-time sports is promising, but director Jesse Vaughan delivers only flat dialogue and predictable situations.