A very frightening weapon was created, a strange drug that reduces the entire population to various mental zombies, but black people still have a spirit and are out of arms. At that moment, a man called Undercover Brother, Brother is a secret agent working for a group of well-known men such as the Muslim Brotherhood, a completely black judicial association, will be appointed to thwart the man's plan to block a presidential candidate named Colin Powell. Perhaps those operations by Undercover Brother are kept secret as well as slow. In the end, the secret weapon of the plot, Penelope Snow, a dangerous secret man, is discovered.
Even during periods when the belly laughs subside, Griffin continues to keep it really amusing with his exuberant flair for physical comedy and mock-serious swagger.
Instead of packing an R-rated, politically incorrect punch, the film goes for the easy laughs without getting too raunchy or violent, and the result is mildly amusing but mostly mediocre.
Scott Von Doviak
Fort Worth Star-Telegram/DFW.com
June 06, 2002
Even the soundtrack selections are second- or third-hand.
Eric Lurio
Greenwich Village Gazette
November 07, 2003
The problem is, that half the time I laughed myself silly, while the other half, I was egregiously offended.
Nick Rogers
Suite101.com
November 10, 2010
"Undercover Brother" fares better as a blaxploitation spoof than as silly-spy shtick. Scathing but not scatological, "Brother's" withering insights are equal opportunity: Here, white guilt is as satirically punishable an offense as propping up prejudice.