Connect with us

Entertainment

Review: Samuel L. Jackson stars in a not-always-in-tune Broadway revival of ‘The Piano Lesson’

Published

on

Review: Samuel L. Jackson stars in a not-always-in-tune Broadway revival of ‘The Piano Lesson’

Spoiled as we’ve been with very good revivals of August Wilson performs, it’s nearly complicated to come across a high-profile Broadway manufacturing that doesn’t fairly dwell as much as expectations.

“The Piano Lesson,” which opened Thursday on the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, appeared on paper to be one of many can’t-miss choices of the autumn season.

Samuel L. Jackson leads a top-notch solid within the first Broadway revival of one of many Pulitzer Prize-winning works in Wilson’s decade-by-decade 10-play cycle chronicling Black life in twentieth century America. What might probably go fallacious?

Nothing, actually. However one thing hasn’t gone fairly proper. Ensemble chemistry is a fragile matter. The actors are all high-quality individually, however their magic fails to coalesce.

Advertisement

The relationships of the characters are curiously imprecise right here. The affections, resentments, money owed and loyalties of the relations and mates who’ve gathered on the residence of Doaker Charles (Jackson) are continuously being rehashed. However the ties that bind this crew in 1936 Pittsburgh appear extra reported than inhabited.

The drama revolves round a valuable heirloom, an upright piano carved with the faces of the household’s ancestors. The destiny of this vintage is being contested by two siblings: Berniece (Danielle Brooks), a widow who has moved along with her younger daughter into the house of her Uncle Doaker after her husband’s homicide, and Boy Willie (John David Washington), who has come up from the South to fetch the piano so he can promote it and purchase the land his ancestors toiled on.

Berniece is afraid of the ghosts that cling to the piano, however she has change into the guardian of its legacy, which incorporates untold household trauma. Boy Willie needs to make use of the one factor his father needed to give him in order that he doesn’t must equally spend his complete life farming on another person’s land.

Wilson sees all sides of the battle. Berniece’s reverence for the previous is each noble and imprisoning. She has settled quietly into a lifetime of mourning. Boy Willie is bold for a greater future, however he’s additionally rash, reckless and fueled by a barely containable rage.

“The Piano Lesson,” even in a in some way lackluster revival, has well timed knowledge to impart — the knowledge of unresolved questions. What ought to our relationship to historical past be? How can we stability the necessity of remembering with the crucial of letting go? If the previous have to be confronted to keep away from being repeated, the place is the road between a wholesome reckoning and a harmful haunting?

Advertisement

After listening to Boy Willie’s defensive rationale for promoting the piano, Doaker replies, “Ain’t no person stated nothing about who’s proper and who’s fallacious.” He doesn’t wish to insert himself in a household struggle, however he additionally appears to share his playwright’s view that such dilemmas can’t be determined with out being patiently and painfully labored by way of.

There aren’t any shortcuts in therapeutic the injuries of household or society. Wilson’s dedication to centering Black lives within the theater entails an embrace of dialectical wrestle. The evil of racism is an inescapable truth. However the battle of the characters, who’re determined to discover a path ahead for themselves, isn’t between proper and fallacious however between imperfect potentialities, every with its personal simple declare.

Sadly, the seams of the play present on this revival, directed by LaTanya Richardson Jackson, an actress with an unflinching regard for troublesome truths, who’s married to Samuel L. Jackson. An clever sensitivity guides the manufacturing, however the plot appears cumbersome and the speak can get cumbersome with all of the exposition and thematic underlining.

Danielle Brooks in ‘The Piano Lesson.’

(Julieta Cervantes)

Advertisement

Brooks, who might be reprising her Tony-nominated portrayal of Sofia within the upcoming movie model of the musical “The Shade Purple,” powerfully conveys Berniece’s sorrowful resolve. She’s sturdy regardless of all of the scars of historical past, however there’s one thing undifferentiated in her struggling.

Washington, an actor following within the footsteps of his father, Denzel Washington, accentuates Boy Willie’s youthful vehemence. He’s decided to declare himself a person, irrespective of that he doesn’t but possess the maturity.

The standoff between Brooks’ Berniece and Washington’s Boy Willie is vigorously laid out. But it surely’s not at all times obvious that these characters are grappling with the identical harrowing previous.

In an ensemble efficiency freed from grandstanding, Jackson by no means makes an attempt to show the play’s host and witness into the central protagonist. His presence is recessive at instances to an nearly shocking diploma, but it surely lends the manufacturing a gravity that doesn’t want many phrases to make itself felt.

Advertisement

Veteran Michael Potts appears a bit too effectively preserved for Wining Boy, Doaker’s washed-up musician brother. However Potts brings his common crisp authority to the raucous tales of this compulsive raconteur.

Ray Fisher almost steals the present as Lymon, who has traveled up from the South with Boy Willie. Slower of speech and extra deliberate of motion than his impetuous buddy, he’s seeking to begin a brand new life for himself up North, probably with Berniece, if he can reawaken the sensual longing she has put behind her — and evidently doesn’t really feel for Avery (Trai Byers), the novice preacher who’s been pursuing her for years.

It onerous to really feel romantic when your piano is a magnet for ghosts. Berniece has to banish the stressed useless earlier than she will even think about her private happiness. She has formidable work to do, however nobody ought to underestimate her soul’s energy.

The realism of the manufacturing (dimly lighted by Japhy Weideman on Beowulf Boritt’s plausible set) has bother accommodating the jarring interruptions from the supernatural realm. It’s one other occasion through which the revival simply can’t appear to tug itself collectively.

However “The Piano Lesson” is welcome even in a manufacturing that compares much less favorably to Ruben Santiago-Hudson‘s 2012 off-Broadway revival. Exterior of the Ethel Barrymore, a bunch of us stood round discussing the play after it let loose. The dialog continued at a late-night restaurant. However how might it not with a lot historical past at stake — the characters’ and our personal?

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

“MaXXXine” Exudes Excess and Maximalist Filmmaking for Better and Worse (Movie Review)

Published

on

“MaXXXine” Exudes Excess and Maximalist Filmmaking for Better and Worse (Movie Review)
IMG via A24

Ti West’s X Trilogy: From divine horror success to “MaXXXine” conclusion.

Trilogies pose a formidable challenge. Achieving success once in filmmaking is a feat, but achieving it across three films where each complements and builds upon the last is akin to divine intervention. This challenge is particularly amplified in the horror genre, where great trilogies are rare and prized. Unlike other genres, horror retains elements of cinema’s attraction-based past, drawing audiences into darkened theaters with the promise of profoundly unsettling experiences that linger long after the credits roll.

Achieving success once in the horror genre takes considerable talent, but doing so three times in a row is an extraordinary accomplishment. Creating three installments of a horror series that are distinct enough to stand alone yet cohesive enough to form a unified whole is a daunting task. Ti West and his collaborators confront this challenge boldly with the X trilogy. While the trilogy-capping MaXXXine may not entirely meet expectations, it remains consistently entertaining and compelling to witness.


5. MaXXXimal Filmmaking

With “X,” Ti West and his team immersed viewers in a film deeply steeped in the gritty ’70s aesthetic, blending elements of low-budget horror with adult film sensibilities. Transitioning to “Pearl,” they skillfully crafted a vibrant, Technicolor experience reminiscent of the whimsical delights from the 1940s, evoking the spirit of Powell and Pressburger. Now, with “MaXXXine,” West and his collaborators boldly delve into the excess and lunacy-driven style of the 1980s, fully embracing its over-indulgent ethos.

In an era where ’80s nostalgia has already had its moment, “MaXXXine” emerges like an irrepressible overdose. With the largest budget of the trilogy, production designer Jason Kisvarday meticulously reconstructs a glamorous yet debaucherous Hollywood of the 1980s. The results are breathtaking, a testament to the filmmaking prowess evident throughout the entire film. “MaXXXine” stands as a triumphant victory lap following the successes of “X” and “Pearl,” granting Ti West unprecedented access to Hollywood’s resources. From expansive soundstage sets to A-list co-stars and elaborate lighting setups, the film showcases West and his team at the peak of their creative powers.

The outcome is a wonderfully maximalist piece of filmmaking, where every dollar spent translates directly onto the screen. Ti West and cinematographer Eliot Rockett craft an immersive and visually stunning experience. “MaXXXine” authentically embodies the ’80s aesthetic, overflowing with nostalgia, and it’s immensely satisfying to witness West harness these tools to capture something so deeply personal and beloved to him.

Advertisement

4. The Big-Name Scenery-Chewers

As mentioned, with its much larger budget, “MaXXXine” also has a whole host of big-name stars who pop up throughout the film, all of whom seem to be having an infectious blast while doing so. Everyone from Lily Collins to Bobby Cannavale to Michelle Monaghan to Halsey turns up in roles of varying sizes and leaves their mark, but the true MVPs, in my opinion, are Kevin Bacon, Giancarlo Esposito, and Elizabeth Debicki.

Bacon is in the film a substantial bit more than I initially assumed he would be, and it is wonderful to see an actor as entrenched in audiences’ collective consciousness show up and remind us exactly why he’s so well-known in the first place. As a private eye with questionable morals, Bacon exudes sleaze and devours every morsel of dialogue he’s given. Esposito is indelibly commanding as something of a parody of the cliché Hollywood agent character archetype, and threatens to steal the show every time he shows up. And Debicki’s performance is easily the most reserved and understated of the bunch, but that winds up working in her favor. There’s a quiet intensity to her conversations with Mia Goth’s Maxine. Her character is ultimately saddled with spouting off some of the film’s biggest themes, and what could have easily sounded hack in another performer’s hands plays with gravitas from Debicki.

3. WEAK SPOT: The Passive Tale of Maxine Minx

So what’s wrong with “MaXXXine?” I’ve already talked about how much I enjoyed the filmmaking craft on display, and I’m going to praise both Mia Goth’s lead performance and Ti West’s direction. But what doesn’t work for me about the film? Sadly, it’s the story.

For as gloriously indulgent and well-crafted as much of “MaXXXine” is, it is ultimately in service of a story that never comes together. By overtly embracing the ‘80s aesthetic and setting, Ti West’s script intertwines various real-world ‘80s elements into the story, from Satanic Panic to the Night Stalker. Unfortunately, this approach is ultimately to the detriment of the film, as it never really develops a coherent narrative of its own. These various threads lead to a fracturing and fragmentation of the plot.

The biggest casualty of all of this is Maxine Minx herself. The titular character is left entirely passive within her own film, burdened with a story that doesn’t embrace the central conflict of want vs. need at the heart of her internal journey across the trilogy. Instead, MaXXXine leaves the character stranded, not playing an active role in her own story. She spends most of the film willfully ignoring the story beats unfolding around her, and the climax quite literally sees her tied up and uninvolved in every single action beat that plays out.

Advertisement

By the time the film reaches its conclusion, it can’t help but feel deflating.

2. Mia Goth’s Performance

Having said all of that, Mia Goth continues to deliver an incredible performance as Maxine Minx even under these circumstances. I wish she had been given a greater chance to shine through involvement in the actual story here, but Goth so thoroughly and articulately elevates what she is given that it remains astounding.

For what it’s worth, I found Goth to be incredible in her dual role in X and even better in Pearl. Goth’s performance in Pearl, right down to its final shot, is absolutely immaculate. In comparison, I don’t find her performance in “MaXXXine” to be as compelling simply because she didn’t have the same level of enthralling material to work with. However, I do absolutely adore the opening scene of “MaXXXine,” which serves as this film’s equivalent to Pearl’s final shot. In it, Goth delivers a masterclass performance and then immediately subverts it. Great stuff.

1. Ti West’s Direct and Editing

While I wish the story felt more motivated and coherent in driving toward its central themes, I would be lying if I said I didn’t thoroughly enjoy the vast majority of “MaXXXine.” Ti West, handling directorial and editing duties on his own as he did with the prior two installments, showcases his graduation to big-budget giallo-influenced ‘80s horror filmmaking while retaining the meticulous visual craft of his earlier work. West is a supremely talented filmmaker, and even if “MaXXXine” serves as a big victory lap for him, Goth, and the team behind these films, that’s fine by me. They’ve earned the right to bask in the limelight, and I genuinely hope West continues to operate at this level for future films. Having crafted great low-budget horror films for decades, seeing him play in a larger playground is undeniably enticing.


(C+)

Advertisement

Overall, “MaXXXine” doesn’t quite stick the landing. It feels less like a cohesive and satisfying film in its own right and more like an epilogue to the prior two films. The story lacks a driving passion and instead seems to follow the inevitable fallout from events set in motion by the earlier installments. It’s hard to argue that “MaXXXine” is the strongest of the trilogy, and viewers unfamiliar with “X” or “Pearl” may not find it satisfying on its own.

That said, despite these shortcomings, “MaXXXine” features great performances, stupendous production design, Mia Goth’s exceptional lead role, and is driven by Ti West’s phenomenal filmmaking craft. It stands as a cinema-of-attractions delight in its own right.


Continue Reading

Entertainment

'Despicable Me 4' notches another win for family films at the box office

Published

on

'Despicable Me 4' notches another win for family films at the box office

“Despicable Me 4” had a strong showing at the top of the box office this weekend as family films continue to drive returns for studios and movie theaters.

The fourth installment of the Universal Pictures and Illumination Entertainment animated franchise raked in $75 million in the U.S. and Canada, according to three-day estimates from measurement firm Comscore. The movie opened Wednesday to $27 million and has now grossed an estimated $122 million.

Disney and Pixar’s “Inside Out 2” finally fell to second place this weekend with $30 million, though it has so far garnered $533 million in U.S. and Canadian box office revenue since it opened last month. The movie has brought in more than $1 billion globally.

Paramount Picture’s “A Quiet Place: Day One” prequel came in third with a second-weekend gross of $21 million, followed by A24’s horror film “MaXXXine” with $6.7 million. Sony Pictures’ “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” rounded out the top five with $6.5 million.

Compared to Memorial Day weekend’s dismal turnout, which prompted much hand-wringing among industry watchers, the extended Fourth of July weekend’s strong results and varied movie options have been a “stark and impressive difference,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore.

Advertisement

“To see this total change in the box office shows how unpredictable the box office can be,” he said. “All it takes is a few over-performances, with some great movies back to back, to totally change the entire perception of the health of the movie theater and of movies in general.”

Part of the momentum is the power of the family film. Some movie theater owners credit the blockbuster performance of “Inside Out 2” with getting audiences — especially families — back in the habit of going to multiplexes. With “Despicable Me 4,” as well as a family-friendly slate later this year, including “Moana 2,” “Sonic the Hedgehog 3” and “Wicked,” theater owners have said they feel optimistic about their end-of-year prospects.

“You’ve got to have the movies out there to pull that audience in,” Dergarabedian said.

But it wasn’t a success story for every film this weekend. “Poor Things” director Yorgos Lanthimos’ latest movie, “Kinds of Kindness,” nearly doubled its screen count to 920 from 490 in its third weekend, yet dropped 45%, to gross just $860,000 for an overall total of $3.8 million.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

Goyo Movie Review: An empathetic and sensitive romantic drama that puts us in the shoes of the other

Published

on

Goyo Movie Review: An empathetic and sensitive romantic drama that puts us in the shoes of the other

The first thing you will notice while watching Goyo is the sensitivity with which Marcos Carnevale has written his lead character. And this empathy is mirrored in those around him: his overprotective concert pianist sister, Saula (Soledad Villamil), his bantering brother-in-law, Matute (Pablo Rago), who never once makes him feel left out in any situation, and his colleagues, in general. Everyone in his immediate surroundings is mindful of his condition, without going as far as to make him feel uncomfortable. A sense that they’re rooting for him all the way comes through quite easily in the narrative. There’s a scene early on when Goyo follows Eva (Nancy Dupláa) to the subway in the hopes of introducing himself. It’s an anxiety-inducing sequence because it is way out of his familiar environment. It ends in Goyo literally falling out the train at a station platform and throwing up, being shown the finger by Eva (she presumes him to be a stalker). A simple act of travel by public transport, something that may seem so mechanical and run-of-the-mill for most, is given so much emphasis, as it may trigger a panic attack for somebody with Asperger’s (as it does for Goyo). Carnevale makes you think a great deal here, placing you in the shoes of someone with special needs. When her colleague is surprised to hear that Eva is going on a date with Goyo, she says, “Have you ever dated a guy who can’t lie? Who speaks his mind. Who is polite, incredibly smart, incapable of hurting you, and on top of all that, handsome? And the former’s response is, “Never in my life.” It is one of those short exchanges that encapsulates the sheer goodness of the film. Eva is in a tough spot with her family life and is aware of a positive influence when she sees one.

Continue Reading

Trending