Connect with us

Movie Reviews

‘A Jazzman’s Blues’ Review: Tyler Perry Revisits a Jim Crow-Era Romance

Published

on

‘A Jazzman’s Blues’ Review: Tyler Perry Revisits a Jim Crow-Era Romance

“A Jazzman’s Blues,” Tyler Perry’s melodrama about ill-fated youngsters who fall in love in rural Georgia, marks the writer-director-studio head’s return to his first screenplay, w‌hich he wrote in 1995. Within the meantime, he broke by with a slew of Madea comedies, and whetted the talents required to ship the faceted fantastic thing about Bayou — his richest male character up to now — with dramas like 2010’s “For Coloured Women.”

It helps, too, that he has discovered an ideal portrayer in Joshua Boone (“Untimely”). Bayou, who’s embodied with a luminous sincerity by Boone, gives a touching tackle the sort of compassionate man a so-called mama’s boy would possibly turn out to be.

The film begins in 1987. An aged model of Hattie Mae Boyd (Daphne Maxwell Reid) paces round her house, listening to a white political candidate (Brent Antonello) being interviewed on tv. He blathers about his household’s civic legacy. When he begins nattering on about not being racist, she shuts off the TV. Then, in brief order, she arrives on the candidate’s workplace with a stack of affection letters — proof, she says, of her son’s killing in 1947. As the person begins studying the letters, the film shifts to the previous, the place it stays for a lot of the star-crossed, racism-infused romance.

Amirah Vann (in a bulwark flip) portrays the youthful model of Hattie Mae, the loving mama of Bayou and his brother, Willie Earl (Austin Scott). Solea Pfeiffer, in a promising onscreen debut, is Leanne, the meant recipient of Bayou’s missives.

From the get-go, Bayou and Leanne acknowledge in one another one thing wounded, but additionally sheltering. However their clandestine affection is upended when Leanne’s mom, Ethel (Lana Younger), bent on passing for white, wrenches her daughter away. The romance is briefly rekindled when a struggle harm sends Bayou house to his mom’s juke joint exterior Hopewell, Ga., and Leanne arrives, newly wed to a scion of the city’s reigning household.

Advertisement

With this flip, the film may need collapsed beneath the load of its twists or drowned within the sentimentality of Aaron Zigman’s rating. A risky scene between Leanne and her childhood-friend-turned housekeeper, Citsy (performed with fierce sensitivity by Milauna Jemai Jackson), helps shore it up.

When Bayou leaves, this time to keep away from a lynching, he heads with Willie Earl and his brother’s music supervisor, Ira (Ryan Eggold), to Chicago. There, Ira lands a nightclub gig for Bayou, a honey-voiced singer, and his trumpet-playing, heroin-shooting brother. (It’s right here that the composer Terence Blanchard, who wrote songs for the movie, and the choreographer Debbie Allen create a few of its most exuberant musical numbers.)

“A Jazzman’s Blues” is full of outsize feelings, but additionally grand themes. The connection of antisemitism to white supremacy will get a major nod. And whereas habit, home abuse and rape have up to now been Perry staples — and seem right here as nicely — they’re now within the service of a extra expansive, chastising saga.

A Jazzman’s Blues
Rated R for scenes of substance abuse, violence, rape, temporary lovemaking and merciless language. Operating time: 2 hours 7 minutes. Watch on Netflix.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Movie Reviews

Movie review: 'Despicable Me 4' fun for kids, nightmare for adults

Published

on

Movie review: 'Despicable Me 4' fun for kids, nightmare for adults
The experience of watching “Despicable Me 4” is a Kafkaesque nightmare, and not only because one of the main characters turns himself into a roach. The film is an interminable 95 minutes of circular, intertwining, seemingly never-ending storylines rendered with such audio-visual cacophony that it dissolves into an indiscernible din. This fourth (or is it sixth?) installment of the inexplicably …
Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

‘Kinds of Kindness’ review: Darkly comedic anthology explores humanity

Published

on

‘Kinds of Kindness’ review: Darkly comedic anthology explores humanity

Throughout his filmography, Yorgos Lanthimos is interested in themes of love and obsession, often explored with characters, who seem to be living on the edge of normal society, as evident in 2009’s Dogtooth, which centered on a husband and wife who keep their children ignorant of the world outside their property well into adulthood. 2024 is already quite the year for the Greek director as his previous outing Poor Things has been a critical and commercial success that has won four awards at this year’s Oscars, and now his latest feature Kinds of Kindness is finally released. 

Amidst the Frankenstein-like science and “furious jumping”, Poor Things is more of a crowd-pleaser through its story of self-discovery within the harsh reality of the otherwise outlandish world. Reunited with his long-time collaborator/co-writer Efthimis Filippou, Kinds of Kindness – set in modern-day New Orleans – is closer to Lanthimos’ earlier work like The Lobster and The Killing of a Sacred Deer, where people are plunged into situations that effectively shake up their lives and lose any touch of humanity in order to get out of it. 

Since Lanthimos’ films often challenge you, though not without some dark humor creeping into the mix, Kinds of Kindness is essentially three films for the price of one, with the same seven actors – Emma Stone, Jesse Plemons, Willem Dafoe, Margaret Qualley, Hong Chau, Joe Alwyn and Mamoudou Athie – appearing in each one in a different role.

Advertisement

The first of which, titled “The Death of R.M.F”, is about Robert Fletcher (Plemons) who follows every order that is given to him by his controlling boss, Raymond (Dafoe), until he refuses to do an act which causes his life to fall apart. Similar to Lanthimos’ 2019 short film Nimic, it is a darkly funny study of a man who regrets this one decision and how it spirals out of control, with an extraordinary turn from Plemons, who tries to maintain his composure and yet it looks he’s about to break. 

Considering the disturbing outcome of the first narrative, it feels tamed compared to the second story, “R.M.F. is Flying”. Left emotionally devastated after the disappearance of his wife Liz (Emma Stone), a marine biologist, police officer Daniel (Plemons) receives a call saying she has been rescued. As she returns home, her strange and seemingly reversed behavior leads to Daniel suspecting her of being an imposter. As well as being more disturbing and ambiguous than the other two narratives, “R.M.F. is Flying” cements a central theme which is somewhat meta to the film’s multiple casting of the same actors, playing characters who are wrestling with their own identity. Playing a married couple that is becoming more about obsessive delusions, leading to horrific abuse, Stone and Plemons are amazing in roles where you can’t tell whose side you should be on, if any. 

Advertisement

As great as Emma Stone is in the first two narratives, it is in “R.M.F. Eats a Sandwich” where she really gets to shine, and yes, this is where she performs her improvised dance that has been used in the film’s promotion. In this third and final instalment, Emily and Andrew (Stone and Plemons) are two cult members who are looking for a woman with the ability to bring back the dead. Considering this is the closest to a Coen Brothers film, where it almost feels like an enjoyable crime caper, what could easily be a cautionary tale about not joining a sex cult led by Dafoe’s Omi, the story makes a dark implication into why Emily would choose the life of a cultist, as seen in a scene where she revisits her old life as a mother and a wife. 

Considering the hopeful nature and visual experimentation of Poor Things, whether consciously or not, it feels Lanthimos wants to return a world where there is no positive outcome of anybody, whilst cinematographer Robbie Ryan, shooting on 35mm Kodak film, presents a stunning, if mundane look of the many settings of New Orleans. Amongst the loose connective tissue between these three tales, including the brilliant cast and similar locations, the only sense of hope that Kinds of Kindness is the dreams that some of the characters have and no matter how nonsensical they are, it is better than the harshness that the real world can throw at them. One dream involving dogs delivers the biggest laugh-out-loud film of the entire film.

Advertisement
kinds of kindness

‘Kinds of Kindness’ review: Darkly comedic anthology explores humanity

Kinds of Kindness

Returning to the director’s roots, so to speak, Kinds of Kindness is strange, uncomfortable and challenging, if you can adjust to the tone of this near-three-hour anthology piece, you will enjoy this experience where you don’t know whether to laugh or pleasantly appalled at.

An incredible cast – with Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons taking center stage – that go into strange places by playing three separate roles.

Three distinct storylines that are a darkly comedic exploration of love and obsession, a recurring theme in Lanthimos’ filmography.

Balancing moments of dark humor, with profound ideas about identity and purpose…

Advertisement

…even though the lack of easy answers and the lengthy running time will challenge a good section of the audience.

Join the AIPT Patreon

Want to take our relationship to the next level? Become a patron today to gain access to exclusive perks, such as:

  • ❌ Remove all ads on the website
  • 💬 Join our Discord community, where we chat about the latest news and releases from everything we cover on AIPT
  • 📗 Access to our monthly book club
  • 📦 Get a physical trade paperback shipped to you every month
  • 💥 And more!

Sign up today

Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

“The Boy and The Heron” by Hayao Miyazaki, Movie Review – Signals AZ

Published

on

“The Boy and The Heron” by Hayao Miyazaki, Movie Review – Signals AZ
Text to speech audio articles made possible by the Quest Grant at Yavapai College. Tuition free industry recognized certificates for your career.

When Hayao Miyazaki announced that 2013’s The Wind Rises would be his “final” film, many suspected that an artist of his caliber would eventually return to create again if given the chance.

Release Date: 07/14/2023

Runtime: 124 minutes

Director: Hayao Miyazaki

Rotten Tomatoes: 97%

iMBD: 7.6/10

Where to Watch: Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video, Fandango at Home, Google Play Movies, YouTube

The Boy and The Heron, Movie Review, film review, Hayao Miyazaki, movies to watch, Japanese films, Miyazaki, Studio Ghibli,The Boy and The Heron, Movie Review, film review, Hayao Miyazaki, movies to watch, Japanese films, Miyazaki, Studio Ghibli,

Ten years later, the legendary Japanese animator, known for classics like Spirited Away, Castle in the Sky, and Princess Mononoke presented us with perhaps his definitive work. This new magnum opus combines the finest elements of his previous films into something sure to be considered the greatest Hayao Miyazaki film of all time.

In the story, eleven-year-old Mahito loses his mother in a hospital fire during World War II

His father soon remarries—his late wife’s sister—moving them to the countryside where he can apply his manufacturing profession to the war effort and support his family as they welcome a second child. Behind their new rural home looms a strange, abandoned tower, and around the pond on the estate grounds flies a mysterious heron.

When his new mother enters the forest in the delirium of pregnancy, the entire estate goes searching for her. Only Mahito knows that the path to finding her leads into the tower.

The heron lures Mahito inside, and he soon finds himself in a dreamlike world that would make L. Frank Baum and Lewis Carroll proud

Unlike The Wizard of Oz or Alice in Wonderland, this narrative leads Mahito into a “world of the dead”—not in the morbid sense typical of Western mythology, but a beautiful realm where spirits migrate between planes of existence. From there he finds himself embarking on an adventure deeper into the world of dreams and death, where he ultimately learns to come to terms with the loss of his mother.

Like the greatest fairytales and childhood fantasies, The Boy and The Heron navigates its mythological story with a dream-logic familiar to anyone who’s plumbed the landscapes found in the deepest sleep.

Advertisement

What sets this film apart from similar narratives—in addition to its uniquely Shintoist approach to mythology—is the masterful cinematography and animation displayed across every frame

From beginning to end, this film showcases a master and his team working at the peak of their craft. It’s a childhood adventure on par with other classics in the genre, sure to take audiences of all ages on a journey they won’t soon forget, and one that begs for a second viewing by the time the credits roll.


About our Admit One Author

Isaac Albert FrankelIsaac Albert Frankel

Isaac Frankel is a freelance writer and content creator specializing in reviews and analysis of cinema, interactive media, and mythological storytelling. He was raised in Prescott, AZ, wrote his first non-fiction book in 2013 after graduating from Tribeca Flashpoint College with a degree in Game & Interactive Media Design, and currently produces content for the YouTube channel: Off Screen.

More of his work and current projects can be found at www.isaacafrankel.com.


Read more stories from Dining, Entertainment, Recreation, & Travel on Signals A Z.com!

First to Know, DealsFirst to Know, Deals

Subscribe and Be the First-2-Know!


If you like this story, consider subscribing to Signals Updates,
Entertainment Events & News!

Show Me How

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending