Archive for the ‘Big Screen’ Category

“Breakfast at Tiffany’s”: The Audacity of Audrey

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

National Public Radio (NPR) had a lively segment on it during Saturday’s “Weekend Edition.” Maureen Dowd wrote her opinion on it for the “Week in Review” section of The New York Times today, Sunday. The subject was the movie Breakfast at Tiffany’s, the 1961 Paramount Pictures release that, under the direction of Blake Edwards, earned Audrey Hepburn another Oscar® nomination for Best Actress. The screenplay is based on a work by Truman Capote. The two important words to keep in mind are “based on,” meaning that its faithfulness to the source material is slight. In fact, if you read Capote’s story, you won’t visualize Audrey Hepburn at all. She’d seem miscast in what became one of her best films and a feature that secured her position as actress, movie star, and fashion icon. The latter is evident in the beguiling opening credits. The black Givenchy dress. How many young woman came to New York City because they wanted to be like Audrey Hepburn as Holly Golightly in the stunning black Givenchy dress! Did it ever occur to most of those young women that, if they really wanted to live like Holly Golightly, they should’ve also watched Jane Fonda in Klute? No. Because they were beguiled by that brilliant, subtle opening. Very early morning. Probably Sunday. No one is on the sidewalks of Fifth Avenue. A cab pulls up and stops in front of Tiffany’s. Out of cab emerges a slim, young woman so elegantly attired and coiffed that it almost makes you ache. She stands before a Tiffany’s window, gazing stone-faced behind sunglasses at diamonds as she has a deli coffee and morning pastry. Is the background music upbeat and signifying Manhattan like something by the Modern Jazz Quartet? Is it violins and other strings in a lush arrangement? No. It’s a wistful, melancholy theme on harmonica. Big city real estate, fashion, elegance and wealth introduced with that rather heartbroken, down-home, country sound. It lets you know that something else is at work behind those visuals and it’s that very work that makes Audrey Hepburn’s choice to play Holly Golightly so bold, so audacious. Rarely has such a 1960s movie about unpretty lives looked so, well, pretty.

In today’s column, Maureen Dowd wrote this: “Even though many of us grew up not realizing it, Holly’s a hooker.” Ms. Dowd is right, I guess. I didn’t realize it until I was a high school senior in South Central Los Angeles. When I was in gradeschool, I was delighted by Hepburn’s looks, her kookiness, her swinging party and her cat named “Cat.” But, in high school, when I saw the movie on TV again and noticed that older men from out of town were giving her $50 “for the powder room,” I knew what that meant. I also realized what was up with the unproductive writer, Paul, played by George Peppard, whose closet has been furnished by a visiting married woman played by Patricia Neal. Holly Golightly and Paul Varjac are being “paid for play.”

NPR and Maureen Dowd got into the discussion of the movie’s Holly Golightly as a new modern woman, of sorts, but both missed one big aspect — how actress Audrey Hepburn bravely flipped the script on her own movie persona. The year before “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” was released, Janet Leigh was a Best Supporting Actress nominee. Leigh was “the girl next door” when discovered by retired screen legend Norma Shearer and eventually put under contract to MGM Studios. After her MGM years, Leigh kicked “the girl next door” to the curb for Alfred Hitchcock and secured her place in film history as the non-virginal Marion Crane in Psycho, for which she earned her Academy Award nomination. In a way, when Norman Bates pushed back that shower curtain, he pushed back the curtain so established Hollywood actresses could step into challenging new turf.

Audrey Hepburn had been the princess swan. She, as screen newcomer, won her Best Actress Oscar for playing a princess in William Wyler’s Roman Holiday. After that, Audrey Hepburn excelled at playing the charming, smart, sophisticated young woman whose independence and intelligence could be appreciated only by an older, mature man. In Billy Wilder’s Sabrina, she turns from the sweetly irresponsible playboy William Holden to his older brother, the seemingly unromantic Humphrey Bogart character. In Funny Face, she falls for Fred Astaire, the man who changes her from Manhattan bookworm to fashion model. Again with Billy Wilder for Love in the Afternoon, she’s a cellist who brushes a young suitor aside to pursue Gary Cooper. Rex Harrison’s Prof. Higgins was older than Freddy in My Fair Lady and what did she find wrong with Cary Grant in Charade? Nothing. Even as the strong-willed nun, a scholastic over-achiever in the field of medicine who returned a ring to a beau before entering the convent, she is drawn to the stern Congo doctor played by middle-aged Peter Finch in The Nun’s Story. Unlike the corporate side of the Catholic Church, that doctor admires her feminist spirit and skills. In “Breakfast at Tiffany’s,” Hepburn breaks away from that. Holly Golightly does not have the character of her women in those other films. Holly is as empty inside as her apartment. And, this time, she needs the younger man to help her find “the same rainbow’s end” mentioned in the song she plaintively sings, Moon River (Oscar winner for Best Song). The avuncular Buddy Ebsen stars as the older man Holly had to leave in the country when she ran off to the Big City. She sets her sights on José, a seasoned South American beefcake who’s financially well off. Paul Varjac is really at the expiration date for being considered “spring chicken” and he knows it. But he is younger than José and, although not rich, he is better for Holly. With José, she would just “go pleasantly to seed” like the geisha in Yasunari Kawabata’s novel, Snow Country. Audrey Hepburn didn’t play it safe having “Breakfast at Tiffany’s.” She raised the stakes and played a dark side of her box office image. It was a risk that, I feel, paid off quite well.

One more thing — to this day, I don’t think any singer has done the Johnny Mercer/Henry Mancini song, “Moon River,” better than Audrey Hepburn did in Breakfast at Tiffany’s.

The Oscars: Black, White & Hollywood Gold

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

It’s been a while since I’ve been on here. I don’t know about you, but I am so thankful to Heaven that I made it through February. That month was a bitch! If you don’t believe me, just as Tiger Woods. Did you see his nationally televised apology? President Nixon didn’t take that long to apologize to the country when he resigned from office back in the 1970s. HE owed me an apology. Tiger Woods didn’t. But that’s just my opinion. Halfway through Tiger’s mea culpa, I was hoping that Kanye West would stagger on and interrupt: “Tiger, I’m happy for you getting some help with your sexual addiction but former Senator John Edwards was the mack baby daddy of the year!”

Now we’re into one of my favorite seasons of the year — Oscar season. Movies are my passion. This year’s Oscar race coverage has shown me two things: 1) Entertainment reporters nowadays are lazy and do very little homework and 2) The field of national entertainment reporters and film critics seen on TV sorely cries out for racial diversity in this, the 21st Century. This is crystallized in how Tom O’Neil columnist for The Los Angeles Times has been covering Best Actress Academy Award nominee, Mo’Nique. I’m not accusing the Caucasian O’Neil of racism. I am charging a national journalist with laziness. O’Neil, in his column, expressed that Mo’Nique was being uncooperative by refusing to “campaign” for her Oscar. Not granting interviews following her nomination and focusing on her talk show duties. Screen legend Katharine Hepburn never campaigned after her Oscar nominations. She steadfastly refused to attend any ceremony when she was nominated. Yet, she won four Oscars® for Best Actress. To Vanity Fair magazine, O’Neil said that no one knew who Mo’Nique was before Precious. He marginalized her to being solely a comedienne and a talk show host who slammed across one of the most galvanizing dramatic performances of the year out of nowhere. He pretty much said the same thing last night in a prime time Oscar-related special hosted by Deborah Roberts on ABC. Again, O’Neil was lazy, uninformed and unimaginative on a national platform.

Cloris Leachman, Sally Field, Tom Hanks, Robin Williams and Ron Howard all have something in common in Mo’Nique. We got to know them every week on TV sitcoms. They went on to earn Oscar nominations for big screen dramatic work. Ron Howard’s was for directing A BEAUTIFUL MIND. All those performers won Oscars. I hope, come tomorrow, that Mo’Nique — who starred in the sitcom “The Parkers” for five seasons — will be a winner too. Mr. O’Neil should’ve keyed into the history of actors who gained sitcom popularity then got Oscar nominations for dramatic acting chops. Mary Tyler Moore did. So did Will Smith. Jamie Foxx had his own sitcom.

When I experienced PRECIOUS for the first time, I was not surprised at Mo’Nique’s performance. I marvelled at it but I was not surprised. Sounding like Addison DeWitt in All About Eve, I felt it was “nothing more than a promise fulfilled.” That’s because of what I saw Mo’Nique do in 2005’s Shadowboxer. The drama stars Helen Mirren as a terminally ill hit woman in a torrid love affair with a younger hit man, played by Cuba Gooding, Jr. Mo’Nique is a revelation as the working class crack addict who has an unrequited love for her young doctor. Her character’s name is “Precious” and the movie was directed by Lee Daniels. I have yet to hear one national reporter ask the actress about or mention that prior dramatic outing with Daniels. She was profiled today on CBS Sunday Morning. No mention.

This, to me, underscores the need for racial diversity in the field of film reviewers/commentators on TV and also underscores the need for the established critics in the somewhat “Whites Only” boys club to pay more attention to the outsiders, shall we say. Last night, O’Neil said on ABC that Mo’Nique has appeared in comedy films that critics really didn’t care about. Can’t we say that same about David Spade and Pauley Shore? When Hustle & Flow, was released and brought Terrence Howard a Best Actor Oscar nomination for 2005, I heard David Edelstein review him on National Public Radio and in his movie critic spot on CBS Sunday Morning. Edelstein raved about this “new” actor who has the intensity of a “young Samuel L. Jackson.” I thought ..”wrong!” He has the intensity of a middle-aged Terrence Howard. Before playing a pimp in HUSTLE & FLOW, Howard had played three historical characters in TV biopics — Jackie Jackson of the Jackson 5, boxer Muhammad Ali and civil rights advocate Ralph Albernathy in a bio mini-series about Dr. Martin Luther King. He had an important supporting role as a no-rhythm high school student in 1995’s Mr. Holland’s Opus, starring Richard Dreyfuss, and he was a key character in the box office hit Big Momma’s House. This body of work dates back to 1992. But to Mr. Edelstein he was “new.”

OK. Enough about race. Do I have predictions for tonight? I’ve not seen Sandra Bullock in THE BLIND SIDE. I hear she’s terrific in it. I’d love to see Meryl Streep win for a brilliant job in a comedy/drama. My big wish is to see Kathryn Bigelow win for Best Director and for her film, THE HURT LOCKER, to get the gold for Best Picture. Will you be watching Hollywood Prom Night? What are your predictions? Who did your dress? Leave me some comments.

AVATAR: Feeling Blue

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

It has a character called “Sully” and some aircraft is brought down by birds.

Will kids want to see the new 3-D sci-fi action fantasy from director James Cameron called AVATAR? Yes. The special effects in the sequences with the blue jungle natives are dazzling and make 3-D more respectable than any film, so far, has. It’s no longer a 1950s novelty. However, parents need to know that AVATAR is over 2 1/2 hours long. Cameron definitely ignored bladders and butts when he made this movie — and you know how kids are. You figure that a movie at the cineplex is now preceded by, at least, ten minutes of trailers and commercials before the feature starts. Children under 12 are going to get fidgetty. The movie is not non-stop action. Plus they have to wear special glasses to get the 3-D effects otherwise you’re squinting like you’ve got glaucoma.

The AVATAR storyline is very “Protect the Rainforest.” Cameron basically pulls from his previous hits and visually repeats himself. It’s like a spoonful of TERMINATOR, a cup of TITANIC and two quarts of ALIENS. To that, he’s added essence of DANCES WITH WOLVES and sprinkled the whole thing with cosmetics from Blue Man Group. As one friend of mine said, “It looks like it should be called AVA-TARZAN.” He’s right. AVATAR is entertaining and one battle sequence near the end will literally make you gasp. Do I want to run out and pay to see it again when it opens? Not right away. Not like I want to see UP IN THE AIR again. (Scroll down to read my review of that film.) AVATAR was just too darn long. Plus, the script is really more for youngsters in an ABC “After School Special” sort of way. Aside from the length, that’s the main glitch. You’d think that — after years of time and millions of dollars spent on this truly beautiful production — someone could’ve come up with a snappier script. Cameron is boasting that AVATAR is revolutionary and takes film-making to a new place. In some ways, it does. But not in the script. George Lucas’ STAR WARS opened with humility in 1977. We went expecting to see a new sc-fi movie with special effects that upgraded the Saturday afternoon kind of movie we babyboomers were used to seeing as kids. We got that. And we got more. Lucas gave us a legend with spirituality as strong as that in some ancient literature. Even Joseph Campbell discussed and analyzed it at length in the must-see 1988 PBS presentation, The Power of Myth. If you’ve never seen the Bill Moyers interview of Campbell as he discusses, among other things, the mythological importance of the original STAR WARS films, you must rent it. Brilliant and enlightening! AVATAR is positioning itself as being just as deep but the storyline is more like comic book fun. When some of the most memorable lines are “Shut your pie-hole!” or “Marine, I wish I had ten more like you,” come on. Comic book. Not high art. The plot has futuristic military officers and scientists dealing with blue jungle beings who, apparently, live in a land rich with oil. Corporate greed strikes some of the Donald Rumsfeld types and they’re at war philosophically with good scientists like the character played with style, wit and verve by Sigourney Weaver. She makes her entrance in an ALIENS-like pod. One macho Marine falls for a blue jungle lady and embraces her people’s respect for the land. That’s the love story that validates the TITANIC-like song over the closing credits.

There’s a chase scene that made me chuckle. One group is fleeing from another. The group running away has a middle-aged woman with auburn hair, a husky black guy with facial hair, a slim dorky white dude and a muscular man in a wheelchair. I said to myself, “This is absolutely perfect for a parody on The Family Guy.” Let’s see if that happens.

Have fun if you take the kids to see AVATAR this weekend. But remember: It’s over 2 1/2 hours long — and you have to wear special glasses.

come saturday morning

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

What a week! We got two different versions of the Black/Norwegian experience. If Tiger Woods was going to be a guest programmer on Turner Classic Movies tonight with Robert Osborne and introduce one of his favorite old movies, it would have to be GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES. More fair-haired women claimed to have had affairs with the superstar golfer, taxing his marriage to his Norwegian wife even more. If Tiger had been married to one of the women on my block when I was a kid growing up in South Central Los Angeles, his proctologist would still be working to remove the nine iron. You do not make a woman sit through that much golf and then cheat on her. You just don’t. On the other hand, a very happy President Barack Obama and Mrs. Obama travelled to Norway where Mr. President received the Nobel Peace Prize just a couple of weeks after announcing that he’s sending more troops into war.

As for Tiger, I logged onto his website and saw his post that he’s taking “an indefinite break from professional golf.” If you’re really into the game, check out the left side for Tiger Tips. A few are:

–Fix, finish and swing
–Maintain a quiet head
–Face up in the rough
–Staying connected
–What’s changed in my swing?

Details are on www.TigerWoods.com.

For your Saturday night entertainment at home, CBS is repeating the Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer classic claymation special. That’s the one with Hermie, the elf that looks like a little version of “Good Morning America” weatherman Sam Champion. NBC airs Frank Capra’s now-revered holiday noir, It’s A Wonderful Life. When we babyboomers were kids, we could –and often did — see that movie in the middle of summer on any local independent TV station. It was a public domain film, not in mint condition. The license had not been renewed. Capra’s movie could have found a home on The Island of Misfit Toys visited by Hermie and Rudolph. My generation embraced that tale of an unemployed, middle-aged family man who is so broke that he considers suicide so his family can live on the insurance money. When Jimmy Stewart’s George Bailey glimpses the possible future thanks to Clarence the Angel and overcomes the local Scrooge, that film (along with LOST HORIZON and MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON) prove that Capra indeed was the Charles Dickens of Old Hollywood. I’m so glad that film preservationists restored and remastered the 1946 feature to the pearly state you can see on the network tonight. And how relevant it’s become again in these unfortunate financial times. One last thing about IT’S A WONDERFUL LIFE. To me, film is literature and many telling things about character are visual, not verbalized. For instance, when Lionel Barrymore as the spiritually and physically crippled Mr. Potter is out to heartlessly seize corporate control of Bedford Falls, notice that he’s photographed near a bust of Napolean. George Bailey is framed near a portrait of a beloved American president. When George gets the psychic gift of seeing what the town would’ve been like had he never lived, notice that there’s not one single Black person in Pottersville. Compare that to the racial diversity in the scene where all the neighbors and friends come to the Bailey home at the end. Very cool, Mr. Capra.

I returned Wednesday from a 2-day trip to Atlanta for the good fortune to shoot an audition for a possible new TV vehicle. This year, I’ve repeatedly had to pick myself up off the mat from the longest stretch of unemployment in my entire life. To get that audition and to work with the excellent crew was a blessing. I came back, continued the job hunt here in Manhattan and took yesterday off from the job hunt to attend a screening of James Cameron’s new sci-fi thriller, Avatar. More about it later. But I will tell you this: It has a character called Sully and some aircraft is brought down by birds. Go figure. Enjoy your weekend.

Janet Jackson Does “The Matrix”?

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Did you ever hear of an author named Sophia Stewart? If you hadn’t, frankly neither had I until this morning. She’s a New Yorker who, reportedly, has been living in Salt Lake City for about five years.

She wrote a book in the early 1980s called THE THIRD EYE. A court has ruled in this Black woman’s favor that her science-fiction manuscript did indeed inspire two blockbuster Hollywood movie franchises — THE TERMINATOR and THE MATRIX.

Stewart, according to Facebook, was heard on Chicago talk radio station WVON this morning and revealed that Janet Jackson and 50 Cent are both interested in appearing in and serving as executive producers of THE MATRIX: 4. That’s some juicy news for you sci-fi fans. To me, that whole legal story — and the amount of money that Sophia Stewart will receive — is one of the most under-reported entertainment news stories to come out of Hollywood this year. I had no idea that the true creator of The Terminator and The Matrix was a Black woman! How come no Black network news person like Deborah Roberts on ABC or her husband, Al Roker on NBC, has brought this to our attention? Did “Entertainment Tonight” cover this story? I could not find the book on the Barnes & Noble website. It is carried but currently out of stock on Amazon.

I read an item stating that Stewart will receive damages for the three MATRIX films plus THE TERMINATOR and its sequels. Apparently, she sent her manuscript to The Wachowski Brothers, who requested new sci-fi works, in the mid-80s. They are credited with writing 1999’s big hit, THE MATRIX, starring Keanu Reeves. There are articles online about her long court case. Go to Google and search this: Sophia Stewart wins lawsuit.

If this is all true, I would love to see a TV interview of Ms. Stewart. Wouldn’t you? Please leave comments if you know anything else about this Hollywood sci-fi secret. I sure hope WVON Radio puts up a podcast of that interview.

“Up In The Air” with George Clooney

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Let me get right to it. If you’re a George Clooney fan, you must see the excellent performance he brings to Up In The Air. Do not be surprised if you hear George Clooney’s name as a Best Actor Academy Award nominee for this mature, relevant comedy. He knocked me out with this role. He not only broke me up laughing but he also brought tears to my eyes with the depth, texture and heart he gives to a character that you’re prepared to hate when the film opens.

The movie is about making connections and about the baggage we carry in our lives. Is it really heavy baggage or not? Are we really getting anyplace better and faster when he travel without any of it? Especially when we’re middle-aged? It’s also a modern-day look at loyalty and loneliness. Don’t worry. There’s also a woman and a little sex to give the story that Preston Sturges or Billy Wilder lemon zest. Clooney’s wise-cracking character, Ryan Bingham, is a sexy corporate Terminator. He frequently flies to companies that are downsizing and he fires people. He talks each person through the severance package. He’s also a motivational speaker. The thing is, you feel that he doesn’t fully believe that whole line of jive he’s slickly giving out at the podium. As for the moments when he tells people they’ve been laid off, you sense that he hates delivering that news and works hard to give each meeting some silver bit of uncorporate humanity.

Did you ever see Cary Grant in Hitchcock’s North by Northwest? Remember when his smooth-talking ad man character, Roger O. Thornhill, pulls out his initialed matchbook on the train and Eve, the cool blonde, asks “What does the ‘O’ stand for?” He saucily answers, “Nothing.” Clooney’s Ryan Bingham is that “Nothing.” If Up In The Air had been a wry comedy made during the economic recession of the early 1950s, it would’ve starred Cary Grant. As the film begins with individual workers expressing disbelief and anger at being let go after years of job loyalty, you are grabbed. This movie’s release is as perfectly timed today as The China Syndrome was in 1979. It’s an odd thing to write, but if you’ve been on unemployment this year, this is the comedy for you.

Be cautious of listening to movie critics review it or National Public Radio show hosts interview actors or writer/director Jason Reitman. He also directed Juno. Be cautious because they reveal way too much nowadays about the films. Especially on NPR. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve heard a host on NPR begin a new film interview question with “At the end of the movie when…” Drives me crazy. Just go and enjoy George Clooney’s new movie. I attended a preview screening. I saw it for free and I’ll be paying to see it again. This won’t ruin anything: There’s a section in Wisconsin. The night time scene in front of the chalet restaurant to the end of the Wisconsin sequence presents some of the richest, funniest and most touching acting of Clooney’s film career. He’s terrific. Well-acted by everyone, smartly and compassionately written and directed by Jason Reitman, Up In The Air is one of the best American films I’ve seen this year.

Precious = A Darker Shade of Purple

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

I’m poor, black, I might even be ugly, but dear God, I’m here. I’m here.”

When Whoopi Goldberg declared those words in The Color Purple, she was surely on her way to getting the Oscar® nomination for Best Actress of 1985 that she so well deserved. Oprah Winfrey, a former local news reporter-turned-Chicago syndicated talk show host proved that no one can put a performer in a box when she earned a Best Supporting Actress nomination for her acting debut in the same film. Winfrey went after her role with a passion. Today, along with Tyler Perry, she presents Precious, a gritty film set in the mid 1980s and a story with elements that echo what Oprah attached to emotionally in “The Color Purple” — attached to in such a vigorous way that it’s all become part of our pop culture thanks to the broadcast icon being in our homes five days a week. That opening quote also applies to Precious.

A Black female is abused and regarded as ugly, there’s vile behavior from a Black man, there’s a kind-hearted lesbian, someone’s favorite color is purple, reading is fundamental and a Black female beaten down by life finds spiritual freedom in writing. I’m not writing this as a criticism, just pointing out that it should be no surprise that Oprah’s name is now in the credits. She’s been on this turf before — and with excellent results. She knows how to work it the same way Bette Davis knew how to work a staircase in just about every single one of her classic films. I’m glad she’s behind Precious. It’s one of the best films I’ve seen this year and her influence will get folks to experience the rivetting performances in it from young actress Gabourey Sidibe as the under-educated, physically abused and pregnant high schooler called “Precious” and Mo’Nique as her horrible mother. In fact, that’s how the girl’s home is shot. Like a house of horrors. It’s dark, creepy and claustrophobic. A monster was made in it. Her mom. Sidibe was born to play Precious. Vulgar and lovable, victimized and triumphant, unattractive and fabulous — she brings all the character’s vivid colors to life.

Today on WNBC, Andy Cohen, the hip gay lord and master executive of Bravo, was promoting his Bravo shows in his segment on the 5:00 light newscast. He also gave his short review of Precious. He loved it. I found this fascinating because Precious is exactly the kind of New Yorker who would be invisible to an upscale, privileged, handsome Manhattanite like Andy Cohen. If a real-life Precious, male or female, showed up at the Bravo studios with hopes of being a regular on one of its real estate or fashion shows, those hopes would be dashed. Trust me. I know. Andy Cohen is not going to send a Cosmopolitan to a male or female Precious in a club — unless that person is someone who knows Anna Wintour or Oprah. When I saw the film at a screening before it opened here in New York, I was one of the few Black folks in the audience. I sat directly behind three Caucasian couples who were all friends and all talking about whom they met and entertained at their summer homes a few months ago. All the Black folks onscreen and, I bet, just about all of us in that audience do not use “summer” as a verb. We have only one home and it’s a struggle to afford that one. There’s a scene in the movie involving a bucket of fried chicken that made me howl with laughter because it was so recognizably ghetto fabulous. The folks in front of me gasped at it. Director Lee Daniels had taken them to a world unfamiliar to them — and that’s good.

In my earlier review of “Precious,” a blog I called “Mariah Carey Beats Madonna,” I wrote that Daniels also directed Monster’s Ball. Wrong. My buddy, future hit indie filmmaker Hunter Altman, caught my mistake. Daniels produced it. Marc Forster directed it. As far as Oprah’s involvement with the promotion of Daniels’ new independent film, “Brava, Oprah.” However, I would like to see her give us other views of the African-American experience. Something not so “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot.” Winfrey’s other acting credits include Native Son — about racism, ignorance and a chauffeur working for Chicago white folks in the 1930s/40s…The Women of Brewster Place put her in the projects….she was a slave in Beloved. I’d like to see her switch it up as an actress/producer. Give us Black families in something like Robert Redford’s Ordinary People or Woody Allen’s Hannah and Her Sisters. Or even slap some new drag on Tyler Perry and give us a Black divorced dad so desperate to see his kids that he becomes a Mrs. Doubtfire.

Personally, I think Oprah will be squealing with glee in a few months. Next year, the nominees for the Best Picture Academy Award increases for five to ten. Precious is good enough to be one of the ten. Now scroll down and read how Mariah Carey did in it.

Michael Jackson: The King Is Risen

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Last night, a friend and I attended a special screening of the Michael Jackson concert documentary, This Is It.

Because of some national TV reports at the time of his untimely death, I entered the theater expecting to see a feeble, insecure, mentally diminished star in a sad attempt to rise from the ashes of a scandal for one final phoenix-like performance — a modern-day male equivalent to Norma Desmond in “Sunset Boulevard,” if you will. After all, he was 50. He didn’t exactly act his age. He hadn’t starred in anything in quite a while. And he had a chimp. Very Norma.

My friend and I were practically speechless with surprise. The sadness came from the fact that he died way too soon. The Michael Jackson in rehearsals for a concert spectacular is fit, focused and in peak performance mode. The voice is good. The moves are fluid. You see a show biz legend, someone who’d won pop music stardom by the time he was a teen-ager, knowing what he wanted in the concert and getting it with confidence and courtesy. He understood his catalogue of hits. He knew what the music did for him and he knew what he did for the music. We also see that he fully knew the machinery of himself, as a performer, and knew how to click into it, make it work, conserve it and challenge it.

When Michael Jackson died, many called him “the greatest entertainer of our time.” Because I’m older, probably, and such a classic film geek, I didn’t quite agree with that. To me, Jackson — despite his pop music greatness — was not in the same category as Judy Garland and Fred Astaire. Those two show biz legends also were stars by the time they were teens — Garland in movies and Astaire on Broadway nearly two decades before becoming a film star himself. Garland and Astaire could sing, dance…and act. They have classic films and Academy Award acting nominations to their legacies. Jackson’s acting as Scarecrow in “The Wiz” was sweetly lame in that bloated turkey of a musical.

In This Is It, director Kenny Ortega does for Michael Jackson what director Vincente Minnelli did for Fred Astaire in The Band Wagon. He gets the best film performance from the superstar in a musical vehicle made after the performer has turned 50. In “The Band Wagon,” Astaire plays a famed movie musical star who’s attempting a comeback after a few years offstage. If Astaire ever got an Oscar nomination for one of his musicals, it should have been for this one. The whole movie is a gem. Gene Kelly was always called “athletic.” Astaire wasn’t — and that’s wrong. He, as does the character he plays, reinvents himself with a jazz beat in the film’s fabulous final number with Cyd Charisse, “The Girl Hunt Ballet.” He was in his early 50s when he made this film. Although he’s surrounded by younger male dancers in the number, you cannot take your eyes of Astaire as he nails Michael Kidd’s complicated and extremely athletic choreography. The same thing happens in “This Is It.” Astaire played a private eye in “The Girl Hunt Ballet” number. Jackson is dressed somewhat like Astaire’s sleuth in his sensational film noir approach to the “Smooth Criminal” number. A music video within the concert, Jackson interacts with Rita Hayworth vamping as Gilda plus other classic Hollywood stars from the 1940s and 50s.

Rehearsing his Jackson Five portion of the show, with backup dancers as his brothers, he seemed a bit bored with those hits. However, he ends it with a touching thank-you at the end of “I’ll Be There.” His new video for “Thriller” and the “Beat It” number would’ve been sure-fire hits with the audiences. Again, that’s the sadness. That multi-media concert, judging from his focus, fitness and form, would have kicked ass. Michael Jackson, the late King of Pop, left us wanting more and left us with a good movie. Just being Michael Jackson was Jackson’s best piece of acting which Kenny Ortega lovingly captured on camera. As my friend, Mario, said to me during the closing credits, “That wouldn’t have been a comeback. That showed he was always here.”

Mariah Carey beats Madonna

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Thursday night, I saw Mariah Carey do something that Madonna has not been able to do for decades. Act.

I attended a screening of PRECIOUS. This gritty drama will get lots of promotion from Oprah Winfrey on her show because she and Tyler Perry are now in the closing credits as executive producers. Not that they were involved with the making of the movie from the git-go, mind you. When PRECIOUS, skillfully directed by Lee Daniels, started gaining heat and getting awards in major film festivals, it caught Oprah’s attention.

But back to pop music diva Mariah. She has totally, fully, completely redeemed herself for GLITTER. She plays a no-nonsense counselor in the 1980s dealing with a girl called “Precious.” That poor high school girl’s homelife is brutal. She is struck regularly. Like a gong. Precious is pregnant and lives with her hateful welfare mom. Carey appears without make-up. Without fancy clothing. Without a wind machine blowing her hair around. Without singing any of those high notes that often make her sound like Flipper. One thing is evident in Mariah Carey’s supporting role. She can act. Well…two things are evident. She can act — and she’s able to grow more of a moustache than her husband can. (How old is Nick Cannon? 14?)

There’s been a lot of buzz that Mo’Nique could be a Best Supporting Actress contender for her performance as the monstrous mother in PRECIOUS. I agree with the buzz. Her vulgar, abusive character is a true horror yet occasionally funny — like a Disney cartoon villainess. The Academy loves giving Oscar® nominations to comedians or funny actors who gained fame in sitcoms and then went dramatic — Cloris Leachman was on THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW when she won Best Supporting Actress for 1971’s THE LAST PICTURE SHOW. Sally Field, Tom Hanks, Robin Williams, Jamie Foxx and Ron Howard are all sitcom veterans who also won their Oscars for dramatic work. Howard was awarded Best Director for A BEAUTIFUL MIND.

Oprah was surprised at Mo’Nique’s scorching dramatic performance. I was not. To me, it was more of a promise fulfilled than a revelation after having seen her play a drug addict in another film helmed by Lee Daniels. SHADOWBOXER starred Helen Mirren (again, brilliant) as a terminally ill hired assassin having a steamy love affair with a younger hired killer, played sharply by Cuba Gooding, Jr. Mo’Nique scored high acting marks as a drug addict who’s attracted to her doctor. Another comedienne who gets a dramatic outing in PRECIOUS is Sherri Shepherd. Her role is small but it’s some of the best work she’s ever done. The movie starts opening early next month. It’s not an easy film to sit through but it’s worth it. I’ll have more to write about it later. By the way, Lee Daniels also directed MONSTER’S BALL. That’s the film that made Halle Berry a history-making Oscar winner and got the late Heath Ledger cast in his now-iconic BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN role.

When a 16 year old Caucasian high schooler gets pregnant and has the baby, it’s a suburban comedy called JUNO. When a 16 year old African-American high schooler gets pregnant and has the baby, it’s an urban drama called PRECIOUS. I wonder if any network entertainment reporters will pick up on that too.

The Dame Game: Women Make Movies

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

In tough times like these, you may not be able to afford dinner for two and tickets to a Broadway show plus cabfare, but you still can afford to go to the movies. Critics may be stymied as to why some lowbrow comedies open and make big bucks. The answer is simple: Folks want a few laughs. Look at the evening news and see the hundreds of fellow Americans losing their jobs or, horribly, losing their homes. After a week of jobhunting and cutting back on expenses, who wants to sit through a deepdish movie about theological psychology like the kind Ingmar Bergman used to give us? As my grandmother never said, “Oy.”

Most entertainment reporters on TV today are a bit too young to make connections to the past in reviewing some current films and filmmakers, so I’m going to give a little history with three films that had something in common — something rare when I was a kid. What is it? Women directors.

When I was a kid in the 1960s, if a Hollywood film was directed by a female, it was usually excellent actress-turned-director Ida Lupino. In the late 80s into the 90s, it was Penny Marshall. Over the summer, Drew Barrymore made her directorial debut with “Whip It.” Ellen Page, Oscar® nominee for “Juno,” played another teen-ager in this sweet movie about a Texan who would rather be a roller derby queen that fulfill her mother’s dream of becoming a beauty pageant winner. Remember the 1979 box office and critical hit “Breaking Away”? Dennis Quaid, Daniel Stern and Dennis Christopher played working class teens in Indiana. Christopher is the teen who wants to break away from his dad and become a champion biker like Lance Armstrong. “Whip It” is “Breaking Away” with skates instead of bikes plus a Girl Power vibe. In fact, Daniel Stern is the dad to Page’s character in “Whip It.”

Back in the day, many of us grew up on double features at the movies. You saw two films for the price of one ticket. Usually, one was the big budget “A” picture and the other one was the smaller budgeted “B” picture. Many of those “B” pictures were very entertaining. Such is the case with “Whip It.” It was an enjoyable “B” picture, nicely directed by Drew Barrymore. However, nowadays, there’s no such thing as a “B” picture in Hollywood thinking. Every single release has to open big or else it’s not a hit. “Whip It” will make a good in-flight movie. It was fun — and now it’s time for Ellen Page to play more grown up women.

I’m worried about the fate of the aviatix “Amelia.” Hilary Swank has two Oscars — one for “Boys Don’t Cry” and the other for “Million Dollar Baby.” When I saw her in that first film years ago, I said to a friend that she should play the legendary and iconic flyer. If you look at the structure of Hilary Swank’s face and look at the size of her teeth, you easily could see that — with a short haircut — she’d be perfect to play Amelia Earhart. Or, with an even shorter haircut, Mister Ed.

I have been fascinated with that historical character since I read about her in elementary school. Frankly, I’m concerned about Swank’s new movie, directed by Mira Nair, the woman who gave us “The Namesake” in 2006, a good and touching film about a family’s roots. “The Namesake” is worth renting for the beautiful performance Nair gets out of Irrfan Khan as the loving father. “Amelia” is a lush budget production from a major Hollywood studio with a two-time Oscar winner and a strong director. But there’s been no buzz about this biopic that opens this coming weekend. That’s not a good sign. I was hoping this would be a hit for Hilary. I didn’t want her to win another Academy Award. Another nomination, fine, but not another win. I couldn’t take her last acceptance speech. It was longer than the movie she won for making. Why was she thanking the key grip and craft services? Just say “You like me! You really, really like me!” and go to Governor’s Ball, for goodness sake.

“An Education” was directed by Lone Scherfig. She’s a Danish director who may very well have an Oscar nominated film to her credit come early next year. This British film is opening slowly across the country. If it comes to your town, go see it! A new actress named Carey Mulligan lights up the screen in this early 1960s coming-of-age movie. She’s luminous. She’s got star quality not to mention wit, spirit, looks, charm and solid acting chops. She plays an exceptional high school senior in an economically, artistically and sexually repressed Britain before the arrival of The Beatles. Will she please her middle class parents and choose university and a possibly dull life over a chance to have some sophisticated, sexy London adventures? What passions will she follow? Trust me on this — go see “An Education.” I think Carey Mulligan is going to get a lot of attention for this performance.

Three 2009 releases. Three women directors. As I wrote, when I was growing up, it was a big deal to have one release in a year directed by a woman. One last thing, I still think there should be a scholarship and/or an award for new women in film named after Ida Lupino. Someone needs to work on that. Maybe I will one day.