Entertainment
Tyler Perry’s surprising confession about watching himself as Madea
The multihyphenate Perry mentioned the decades-long street to the discharge of “A Jazzman’s Blues,” a Netflix drama that weaves a homicide thriller and love story into a bigger story about racism within the Deep South within the twentieth century. He appeared on an episode of the inaugural season of “Who’s Speaking to Chris Wallace,” a brand new CNN and HBO Max sequence. (CNN and HBO Max share father or mother firm Warner Bros. Discovery.)
“I have been very intentional in my positioning of myself in so far as within the business,” Perry advised Wallace. “I knew my viewers would assist me and the Madeas and ‘Why Did I Get Married?’ and the entire large broader comedies. However this I held on (to) so lengthy as a result of I used to be ready for the fitting time.”
The expertise of crafting “A Jazzman’s Blues,” which he wrote and directed, was distinctive from his different initiatives, which he stated “at all times felt like work.” This movie, which stars rising stars Joshua Boone and Solea Pfeiffer, “was simply love,” he stated.
“Each component, every thing you touched, from the units to the bushes to the situation — all of it spoke to me,” he stated. “And it was greater than what I ever imagined once I wrote it 27 years in the past.”
The mission is deeply private to Perry, referring to colorism rooted in his personal experiences.
“Once I began writing Bayou’s character, performed by Joshua Boone, his father despised him [and it] sort of took me to my very own father and and among the issues that my father had with me is as a result of I used to be a brown little one. His favourite little one was they very reasonable little one. My father grew up within the Jim Crow south they usually do it an entire lot of issues. So there was this mentality of the lighter your pores and skin, the higher you have been and that lived on and nonetheless lives on at the moment.”
“For me, I really like the flicks that I’ve finished as a result of they’re the folks that I grew up with, that I signify,” he stated. “What’s necessary to me is that I am honoring the folks that got here up and taught and made me who I’m.”
Although he is happy with Madea, Perry has hassle viewing clips of himself in Madea drag. He winced when Wallace shared footage from previous Madea-starring movies. (Wallace, for his half, stated that “Madea’s Household Reunion” was “good.”) Perry stated he is “at all times been extraordinarily uncomfortable” within the fats go well with he wears to play her, however because the character’s sport rose, so did viewers demand for extra Madea.
“The viewers will not let her go,” he stated. “Even the final time I did it, I stated ‘I am out, I am not doing it anymore.’ After which the world goes the other way up and we have now a brand new president. So I wished to make folks snort … However the minute folks cease coming to see her, that previous broad is lifeless. She’s lifeless, for positive.”
Perry relented when Wallace requested him about Madea’s future: “My mom advised me maintain Madea round earlier than she died,” he stated. “So so long as folks need to see it, (Madea) might be round.”
“Who’s Speaking to Chris Wallace” streams Fridays on HBO Max and airs Sundays at 7 p.m. ET on CNN.
Movie Reviews
Moana 2 movie review: Disney’s sequel is visually breathtaking but fails to recreate the magic of first part
The makers have made Moana 2 a visual spectacle but failed to add depth to the emotions of the characters as the film is marred by the unidimensional and predictable storyline
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Star cast (Voiceovers): Auliʻi Cravalho, Dwayne Johnson, Khaleesi Lambert-Tsuda, Rose Matafeo, David Fane, Hualālai Chung, Awhimai Fraser, and Gerald Ramsey
Directors: David Derrick Jr., Jason Hand, Dana Ledoux Miller
Well, the first part of Moana was like a breath of fresh air for me, and I still cherish it as one of my favourites thanks to its emotional depth and other amazing elements. After a gap of eight years, the second part of our beloved is set to hit the screens, and while the expectations are sky-high, with a heavy heart, I have to admit that it fails to recreate the magic of the first part.
Talking about the plot, _
Moana 2 s_tarts after 3 years from where the first part concluded. Our beloved wayfinder Moana is hunting for more islands like her own Motunui, where people reside. Amid this, she gets an unexpected call from her ancestors, who inform her about the cursed island of Motufetu, which is deserted by the power-hungry god Nalo.
As the world is disconnected due to Motufetu being submerged in the ocean, Moana along with her small group of unique and weird people is on a mission to find Motufetu, which will reconnect all the people. On the journey, she also finds her old friend Maui, who claims himself to be a demi-god. Well, will they be able to save the island and beat god Nalo? For that, you have to watch Moana 2 on the big screen.
Honestly, the makers have made Moana 2 a visual spectacle but failed to add depth to the emotions of the characters and are marred by the unidimensional and predictable storyline. While the sequel is ahead of its predecessor in terms of VFX but lacks the magic of the first part.
The film doesn’t have any high points or wow moments as the challenges faced by the limited and prominent characters don’t emerge as an engrossing experience. Despite these problems, I still feel Moana 2 will be a delightful experience for kids between 10-12 years, who will love the cheerfulness and larger-than-life portrayals.
On the whole, Moana 2 is not a bad film but nowhere close to its prequel.
Moana 2 is releasing on 29th November
Rating: 2.5 (out of 5 stars)
Entertainment
Review: A tense household becomes a metaphor for Iran's divisions in 'The Seed of the Sacred Fig'
Reality seeps into “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” in multiple ways, including ones that writer-director Mohammad Rasoulof couldn’t have imagined back when he shot this absorbing drama in secret. One of Iran’s signature filmmakers — and among those most often in the theocratic government’s crosshairs — the 52-year-old auteur, now living in exile in Europe, tells the story of a family whose social standing becomes threatened by simmering societal tensions right outside their door. In order to preserve the rigid status quo, the clan’s patriarch will do everything he can to keep the winds of change from invading his household and affecting his wife and daughters. By making the political personal, Rasoulof warns us that repression starts at home.
Misagh Zare stars as Iman, who has just been promoted to investigating judge in the Revolutionary Court, a reward for 20 years as a dedicated attorney. His supportive wife, Najmeh (Soheila Golestani), is proud of him but also excited for what this new job means for them and their children, willful 21-year-old Rezvan (Mahsa Rostami) and insecure teen Sana (Setareh Maleki). They’ll receive a spacious home in a better section of Tehran, and maybe they can finally buy that dishwasher Najmeh has been craving. But Iman warns his family that, since judges are demonized in Iranian society, they need to be careful not to spread this news around. Underlining the occupational hazards awaiting Iman, he has been issued a gun for his protection.
As soon as Iman shows his alarmed wife that gun (it’s loaded, but he assures her the safety is on), audiences can start worrying about precisely when the weapon will go off. Provocatively, Rasoulof makes no attempt to hide his story’s metaphors or plot twists. If anything, he boldly foreshadows the darkness just on the horizon, shooting his drama austerely, the weight of inevitable doom hanging over everything.
Over the last 15 years, Rasoulof (“Manuscripts Don’t Burn,” “There Is No Evil”) has been imprisoned multiple times and had his passport confiscated, accused of spreading anti-government propaganda through his politically pointed films. “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” was inspired by one such jail stint in 2022, which occurred during the same time as that summer’s “Woman, Life, Freedom” uprising, sparked by the death of 22-year-old student Mahsa Amini while in the custody of the police, who arrested her for not wearing a hijab in public. (Authorities claimed Amini died of a heart attack, but her family insisted they fatally beat her.)
Those real-life events strike a match that lights the film’s slow fuse. Initially, Rezvan and Sana express frustration that their father’s new job requires them to conduct themselves “properly” outside the house. (Who knows who might be monitoring their social media presence?) But soon, it’s impossible for them or their mother to miss the violent protests in the wake of Amini’s death. Najmeh steadfastly echoes what she sees on state-run news services — Amini’s death was an accident — whereas her daughters, getting information on their smartphones, strongly suspect otherwise. And then Rezvan’s college friend Sadaf (Niousha Akhshi) is accidentally trapped in a campus protest, her face obliterated by buckshot fired by police. Long maintaining that the protesters are just thugs, Najmeh painfully removes the rounds from Sadaf’s bleeding wounds, her assumptions about the government she’s loyally obeyed falling away.
A film about complicity and denial, “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” examines how a seemingly reasonable husband and wife can tacitly support this national charade. Iman quickly learns that the “investigating” part of his job title is more of a suggestion: He is expected to sign death warrants for individuals the prosecutor has demanded be executed. At first, his conscience bothers him, but Zare’s performance is a wonder of quiet rationalization as Iman gradually decides that going along is better than making waves. A man of no strong principles beyond protecting his status, Iman is by turns pathetic and terrifying, the latter occurring when Iman discovers that his gun has gone missing, an oversight that could lose him his promotion. His fervor to determine who took the weapon reveals a shockingly monstrous side, turning his wife and children into frightened suspects and leading to a jarring tonal-shift ending that proves to be a cathartic, believable final destination for a film simmering with mistrust and anger.
Anticipating his movie’s inflammatory subject matter, Rasoulof had to cast and film “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” without tipping off the authorities. That knowledge adds additional layers of defiance and bravery to this grim tale, which incorporates actual protest footage and video of police brutality to amplify the narrative’s verisimilitude. But ugly reality imposed itself unpredictably as well. Shortly before the film’s Cannes premiere, Rasoulof was once again sentenced — this time, for eight years in prison. Instead, he fled Iran, arriving at the festival screening to a hero’s welcome. The sorrow and hope interwoven through “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” are vibrant but also bittersweet, considering that Rasoulof had to escape his homeland for telling the truth about the oppressive regime seeking to silence him.
“The Seed of the Sacred Fig” may open on Iman, but eventually, the focus shifts to Najmeh and her daughters, who are positioned as the possibility for liberating Iran from its regressive, patriarchal government. Rezvan and Sana are young and smart enough to recognize the regime’s cruelty, which makes Najmeh’s evolving mindset the film’s emotional center. Golestani shines as a woman clinging to her illusions — about a wife’s place, about women’s second-class status — because she’s never permitted herself to think any other way. The actor, like everyone else in “The Seed of the Sacred Fig” who took part at grave risk, makes that awakening moving. Najmeh thinks she’s saving her daughters — they may end up freeing her instead.
‘The Seed of the Sacred Fig’
In Persian with English subtitles
Rated: PG-13, for disturbing violent content, bloody images, thematic content, some language and smoking
Running time: 2 hours, 48 minutes
Playing: Opens Wednesday, Nov. 27, AMC Century City
Movie Reviews
'Wicked Part One' is a movie you should go see right now
I saw the stage play several years ago in Chicago and was lukewarm about the show. So, I was not excited about going to the screening. Wow, was I pleasantly surprised. The movie is very different from the stage play. If you are not a fan of the stage play, you owe it to yourself to try the movie.
“Wicked” is the story of Glinda, the good witch of the North, telling the troubled story of Elphaba’s life to the people of Munchkin land. Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, is rejected most of her life because of her green skin. At Shiz University, she forms an unlikely friendship with a beautiful young woman named Galinda, another student who is filled with an undaunted desire to be popular. Following an encounter with the Wizard of Oz, their relationship soon reaches a crossroad as their lives begin to take different paths.
Academy Award nominee Cynthia Erivo stars as Elphaba. Ariana Grande costars as Glinda/Galinda. Academy Award nominee Jeff Goldblum is the Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Academy Award winner Michelle Yeoh is Madame Morrible. Jonathan Bailey is Fiyero, the love interest. Ethan Slater is Boq. Marissa Bode is Elphaba’s sister Nessa. Idina Menzel and Kristen Chenoweth, the original Elphaba and Glinda in the 2003 stage play hit have cameo roles in “Wicked” the movie as Wiz-O-Mania super stars.
The performances of Erivo, Grande and Bailey are outstanding. Both have gorgeous voices that is a joy to listen to even though I thought the music was beautiful but there wasn’t an outstanding song.
Jon M. Chu directed. He also directed one of my favorite movies, “Crazy Rich Asians.” Winnie Holzman and Dana Fox wrote the screenplay based on the book “Wicked” by Gregory Maguire that was based on the L. Frank Baum classic book, “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.” The movie was so much more detailed than the stage play and the story made more sense.
The Choreography by Christopher Scott was reminiscent of the Busby Berkeley movies of the 1930s.
Cinematographer Alice Brooks does a phenomenal job of emphasizing the beauty of the choreography, the sets and the costumes.
Paul Tazewell’s costumes are colorful, beautiful and add so much to the beauty of the movie.
I expect that “Wicked, Part One” will be nominated for all sorts of Academy Awards, Critics Choice Awards, and Golden Globes. It is a beautiful entertaining film for the whole family.
“Wicked Part One” rated PG is now showing in Edwardsville, Alton, Granite City, Jerseyville and Carlinville. I give it 5 stars. The sequel, “Wicked Part Two,” is scheduled for release on November 21, 2025.
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