Post by Doomsday on Dec 21, 2020 13:13:10 GMT -5
Ma Rainey's Black Bottom
Based on an August Wilson play, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom spends an afternoon in a recording studio with the titular Ma Rainey, Mother of the Blues. Like other films based on plays, Ma Rainey is driven almost entirely by character interaction. There isn't much of a linear narrative to speak of and takes place primarily in a studio basement. It's rather understated and isn't the spectacle that many are used to seeing in mainstream films in 2020. Ma Rainey (Viola Davis) is a no-nonsense, tough talking performer and her band is left waiting and given time to discuss their talent, ambitions and past. The one hothead in the band, Levee (Chadwick Boseman), is eager to launch a career of his own but is clearly plagued by his experiences with the white man which drives his rage and will to be independent. Naturally, the temperaments of the characters reach fever pitch and the afternoon doles out its consequences to our main characters.
As you can probably guess, Ma Rainey is a performance-driven vehicle. It's already earned considerable Oscar discussion and it isn't without merit. I would expect Viola Davis to almost certainly get another nod and could very possibly get her second Oscar while Chadwick Boseman is probably already in the lead for his first albeit posthumous win. His performance as Levee ranges from happy go lucky to rage-filled and you can definitely see a role that would have been a perfect Denzel vehicle 20 years ago. Unfortunately being put on the Oscar pedestal makes the expectations high, sometimes impossibly high. While Ma Rainey does have some awards-caliber performances it also reintroduces themes, discussions and issues that are important but not unfamiliar. There are discussions on race, poverty, standing up to oppression and standing up for what's yours. The setting is unique and the characters are compelling but it doesn't say a lot that we haven't already heard before nor does it tell us much that we don't already know. Levee's final scene and conclusion also seems very shoehorned in and almost silly, like something that doesn't belong but is trying its best to fit in. Still, expect to see it spoken of come awards season if only for the lead performances which are quite great. The movie itself is a good way to spend an evening even if it does seem familiar in several parts.
B+ so says Doomsday
Based on an August Wilson play, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom spends an afternoon in a recording studio with the titular Ma Rainey, Mother of the Blues. Like other films based on plays, Ma Rainey is driven almost entirely by character interaction. There isn't much of a linear narrative to speak of and takes place primarily in a studio basement. It's rather understated and isn't the spectacle that many are used to seeing in mainstream films in 2020. Ma Rainey (Viola Davis) is a no-nonsense, tough talking performer and her band is left waiting and given time to discuss their talent, ambitions and past. The one hothead in the band, Levee (Chadwick Boseman), is eager to launch a career of his own but is clearly plagued by his experiences with the white man which drives his rage and will to be independent. Naturally, the temperaments of the characters reach fever pitch and the afternoon doles out its consequences to our main characters.
As you can probably guess, Ma Rainey is a performance-driven vehicle. It's already earned considerable Oscar discussion and it isn't without merit. I would expect Viola Davis to almost certainly get another nod and could very possibly get her second Oscar while Chadwick Boseman is probably already in the lead for his first albeit posthumous win. His performance as Levee ranges from happy go lucky to rage-filled and you can definitely see a role that would have been a perfect Denzel vehicle 20 years ago. Unfortunately being put on the Oscar pedestal makes the expectations high, sometimes impossibly high. While Ma Rainey does have some awards-caliber performances it also reintroduces themes, discussions and issues that are important but not unfamiliar. There are discussions on race, poverty, standing up to oppression and standing up for what's yours. The setting is unique and the characters are compelling but it doesn't say a lot that we haven't already heard before nor does it tell us much that we don't already know. Levee's final scene and conclusion also seems very shoehorned in and almost silly, like something that doesn't belong but is trying its best to fit in. Still, expect to see it spoken of come awards season if only for the lead performances which are quite great. The movie itself is a good way to spend an evening even if it does seem familiar in several parts.
B+ so says Doomsday