12 Years a Slave (NOW PLAYING)

I will not fall into despair!  I will keep myself hardy until freedom is opportune!  -Solomon Northrup

This film is being called a Pan-African film, since the director (Steve McQueen) is a black Briton, the star (Chiwetel Ejiofor) is Nigerian-British, and the female lead (Lupita Nyong’o) is Kenyan.  As we have seen, outsiders are  often the best storytellers of the American experience, of which slavery is a (large) part. 

Solomon (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and fellow slaves in sugarcane field
Solomon (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and fellow slaves in sugarcane field

I went to see this film during its second week of release; the theater was packed.  Yes, it was difficult (at times) to handle. One of my friends, a lawyer with a background in civil rights, commented that “it should be taught in schools.”  Based on a true story (memoir), 12 Years a Slave basically blows every other film I’ve seen about slavery out of the water; nothing even comes close!  

Alex Haley’s Roots (starring a young LeVar Burton) is a fine TV miniseries, but will look outdated to younger viewers.  Even one of my favorite films, Glory, is told mainly through the eyes of its white hero, Col. Robert Gould Shaw (Matthew Broderick), not the enlisted men of the 54th Massachusetts Colored Regiment (including Andre Braugher, Morgan Freeman, and Oscar-winning Supporting Actor Denzel Washington).  Queen (starring a young Halle Berry) is another of Haley’s stories turned mini-series; many will find the (inherently unequal) romance between a white boy and one of his family’s slave girls problematic.  Amistad is a powerful film, but it’s focus is mainly on a group of white abolitionist men; Ejiofor has a small role as an interpreter in that film. 

SPOILERS: Don’t read further if you have not yet seen, or don’t want to know, details from this film.

Solomon with his family
Solomon with his family

This film is told in flashbacks through the eyes of a free man and talented violinist, Solomon Northrup (Ejiofor, finally in a star-making role).  He lives a comfortable life with his loving wife (a well-respected cook) and two adoring children in upstate NY at the start of the tale.  He has a fondness for nice clothes.  One day, two white men from Washington, DC, approach Solomon about making some (fast) money with their traveling circus show.  Solomon goes to DC with them and works for 2 weeks, before they drug him (during a lavish dinner) and sell him into slavery.  Solomon wakes up in a dark cell, chained up like an animal, but there’s nothing he can do (being in Virginia).  He keeps crying out that he’s a “free man,” but no one will listen.    

Solomon gets to know the others being held with him, including a well-spoken woman, Eliza (Adepero Oduye), who was once the favored slave of her owner, and has a daughter by him.  She also has a adolescent son, who Solomon comforted when he was separated from his family.  After this master died, his daughter had them all sold. Solomon, Eliza, and a dozen others are taken further South (via large riverboat).  

One young man, Clemens (Chris Chalk from The Newsroom), explains that he shouldn’t be sold further South, since he was taken from his master.  He talks tough about escaping by attacking the sailors, though they are greatly outnumbered.  Another man (Michael K. Williams from The Wire) is stabbed to death before he can make a move.  (I read that fans of The Wire were especially shocked to see such a strong man killed so easily/quickly.)  A beautiful young woman grabs onto Solomon’s hand, not in passion, but with loneliness.  We wonder how long ago was she loved by anyone

Solomon and Clemens (Chris Chalk) witness brutality on the boat
Solomon and Clemens (Chris Chalk) witness brutality on the boat

Paul Giamatti plays a callous/brutal slave trader, ironically named Mr. Freeman, and does an excellent job.  Clemens is “rescued” by his rightful master, to whom he clings like a thankful little boy.  Why?  Because it’s the master he knows, and has treated him decently.  Freeman separates Eliza from her son without flinching, since he can get a great price for a healthy, adolescent boy.  

Solomon and fellow enslaved meet slave trader Mr. Freeman (Paul Giamatti)
Solomon and fellow enslaved meet slave trader Mr. Freeman (Paul Giamatti)

When a kindly slaveowner, Mr. Ford (Benedict Cumberbatch), tries to buy Eliza and her daughter together, Freeman ups the price of the little girl.  He can get a fine price for her in Louisiana, since she’s half-white and “will grow to beauty.”  (This is what Eliza feared all along- shudder!) 

Eliza (Adepero Oduye) gives into despair
Eliza (Adepero Oduye) gives into despair

He [Mr. Ford] has a debt problem and can’t manage his business- he sells human beings in order to make himself solvent.  -Benedict Cumberbatch

Mr. Ford, who runs a small mill, buys Solomon and Eliza.  When they get to his home, Ford comments to his wife that the separation “couldn’t be helped.”  Mrs. Ford lightly tells Eliza: “Your children will soon be forgotten.”  (This made the audience gasp with shock.)  Solomon tries to calm Eliza, but she stays despondent.  Mrs. Ford grows “weary” of Eliza’s crying and has her sold away. 

It doesn’t take long for Solomon’s intelligence to show, impressing Master Ford, but garnering the wrath of his insecure overseer, Tibeats (Paul Dano), who has a keen dislike of the African race.  (That song he sings is horrid!)  When Solomon’s plan works, Mr. Ford presents him with a violin.

Solomon impresses Mr. Ford (Benedict Cumberbatch), not overseer Tibeats (Paul Dano)
Solomon impresses his owner Mr. Ford (Benedict Cumberbatch), not overseer Tibeats (Paul Dano)

Who can forget the long, yet highly effective, hanging scene?  Wow!  McQueen keeps the camera focused (for a long time) on Solomon, struggling to stay alive, while the other slaves go about their daily routine.  Thus, the audience can’t look away!  Master Ford takes Solomon into the house one night to protect him.  After barely escaping death, Solomon lies in the foyer, shaking and speechless.  Ford fetches his rifle, knowing that Tibeats and his brothers seek to kill Solomon.  He tells Solomon that he’ll “transfer the debt” to Mr. Epps.  I was a bit surprised to see Cumberbatch (the quintessential posh Brit) in this film, but he did a fine job, as usual.       

Edwin Epps (Michael Fassbender) reads The Bible while his wife (Sarah Paulson) looks on
Edwin Epps (Michael Fassbender) reads The Bible while his wife (Sarah Paulson) looks on

How brutal is Mr. Epps?  Well, during a recent Daily Show interview, Irish actor Michael Fassbender explained that the saying “don’t be such an Epps” still exists in a part of Louisiana.  Master Epps owns a cotton plantation, twists The Bible to his liking, and is liberal with the whip.  From the start, Epps takes a dislike to Solomon (who is smarter than his owner, but not so good at picking cotton).  A petite, soft-spoken slave woman, Patsey (Nyong’o), is the best picker in the field.  “God give her to me,” Epps comments, after he praises her work.  (Fassbender is quite creepy in this scene!) 

Mistress Epps scratches the face of Patsey (Lupita Nyong'o)
Mistress Epps scratches the face of Patsey (Lupita Nyong’o)

It turns out that alcohol is not Epps’ only weakness- he wants Patsey to yield to his “love” (though he doesn’t know the meaning of the word).  When Epps comes to Patsey late at night, she stays as still as she can and won’t look him in the eyes.  Mistress Epps (Sarah Paulson from Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip) focuses all her rage at Patsey (throwing a heavy vase; scratching her cheek) in front of the other slaves.  (I’ve never seen Paulson in such a meaty film; she’s very scary!)  

Epps puts his wife in her place
Epps puts his wife in her place

We get to see Patsey singing and making straw dolls in the fields.  And we see the desperation in Epps’ eyes when he’s near Patsey.  Why is his wife so one-note?  What’s her deal?  An African-American journalist shares her analysis:     

A white woman’s rage: privileged with no position, positioned with no power, powerful with no promise of independence, fidelity or safety.  The white woman could not properly direct her rage at her husband, she could not rail against white male supremacy. She too was in hell, and Black enslaved women were the only ones in the chambers below her.  -Michaela Angela Davis

Patsey seeks respite with friendly Mistress Shaw (Alfre Woodard)
Patsey seeks respite with friendly Mistress Shaw (Alfre Woodard)

[Slave narratives are…] vital for us to have our feet on balanced ground in the future. I think it’s a chunk of our history that we are in denial about and that we don’t accept. And it is the root, I would say, of our contemporary domestic problems.  -Alfre Woodard

On her off day, Patsey spends time with Mistress Shaw (Alfre Woodard, one of my favorite actresses), the wife of a neighboring farmer, who used to be a slave herself.  Master Shaw fell in love with her, she encouraged his affections, and now lives in ease and comfort.  “In time, the good Lord will handle ’em all,” she tells Solomon, when she sees his downtrodden face.  Patsey and Solomon have some tea with her, a brief respite from their lives. 

Patsey begs Solomon to end her misery
Patsey begs Solomon to end her misery

One of the saddest scenes in the film is when Patsey wakes Solomon up late at night, and begs him to drown her in the nearby river.  She doesn’t have the courage to kill herself, and knows it’s not the Christian way.  Solomon is horrified by her request- he can’t do that! 

Solomon convinces Epps to trust him over Armsby
Solomon convinces Epps to trust him over Armsby

A white indentured man, Armsby (Garrett Dillahunt from Raising Hope), comes to work on the farm.  When he brings in a small load of cotton, Epps gives him a few encouraging words, but whips a few of the slaves (who were also bad pickers that day).  After Solomon is whipped, Armsby tends to his wounds and tells his life story.  Solomon asks him to mail a letter, but he’s not to be trusted!  When Epps confronts Solomon, he has to think fast and convince his master that Armsby (the newcomer) is the liar.  Notice how Epps often leans on his slaves, as if they’re furniture?  But in this scene (pictured above), I thought the director was also trying to show the terrible embrace of slavery in which these two men were bound.    

Solomon uses blackberry juice to secretly write a letter
Solomon uses blackberry juice to secretly write a letter

After a long internal struggle, Solomon reconciles himself to his position as a slave (like all the others in the fields).  He joins fellow slaves in song in one pivotal scene. 

Bass (Brad Pitt) is against slavery
Bass (Brad Pitt) is against slavery

When a traveling builder from Canada, Mr. Bass (Brad Pitt, also a producer), comes to work on a project, Solomon finds a sensible/sympathetic ear.  This self-made man is not scared to tell Epps that he feels slavery is inherently wrong.  Finally, Solomon reveals his story and gives him a letter.  Notice how Bass is sitting on a beam above Solomon?  (Some critics found Pitt’s presence distracting, but I saw no problem.)

Solomon looks up at Bass
Solomon looks up at Bass

There is no Hollywood ending here; an elderly white store owner travels down South to vouch for Solomon.  Epps rages at him, but Solomon quietly follows his old acquaintance to a carriage.  Patsey watches as Solomon rides away; we know she’ll probably never escape her horrible life.  When Solomon returned to his family, I felt the tears coming.  There was a big “whoa” from the audience.  His daughter is married with a baby son.  Solomon’s son is taller than him now.  Solomon is overcome with emotion, realizing how much he missed (it was stolen from him).  He bows his head, cries, and says “forgive me for my lateness.”  His wife quietly replies, “There is nothing to forgive.”  He survived- that was his heroic act.          

Director Steve McQueen and his cast
Director Steve McQueen and his cast

Ejiofor (if you don’t know his work already) will steal your heart in this movie.  His large, expressive eyes say it all, even when Solomon has to swallow his pride (being a free man) and stay silent.  When he tries to run away, but runs smack into a lynching in progress, it’s just so heartbreaking! There is nothing showy or overdone- he simply inhabits the character.  At one (silent) point, he looks directly into the camera, as if to say “Yes, this really happened.”  Fassbender, who has worked with McQueen on several other films, creates a crazed, obsessed, alcoholic- a very compelling villain. 

The cinematography is also very effective- we see the brutality of slave life in the (often) gorgeous environment.  The director takes some risks, but they pay off.  Nudity is used, not to titillate, but to point out the powerlessness of enslaved black bodies.  Long takes show us the seriousness of the topic- no romanticizing here.  The bloody whipping scene involving Epps, Patsey, and Solomon will stay in your mind for a long time.    

Short reviews of recently viewed films

Admission

Admission

This is an above average rom-com, starring Tina Fey (who doesn’t love her!?) and Paul Rudd  (ditto), but w/ some unexpected twists and some smart/funny dialogue.  The young characters performed pretty well, I thought.  It was cool to see Michael Sheen (has own Showtime series now) and Gloria Reuben (ER), who plays Fey’s rival co-worker, after a long time! 

The Butler

Lee-Daniels-The-Butler-

Director Lee Daniels said that he envisioned this film (based on a true story) primarily as “a love story between a father and son.”  Forest Whitaker, who plays apolitical/humble/hard-working butler Cecil Gaines, is flawless (as usual).  Oprah has an unique air/look about her (in the role of bored/troubled housewife); she does a good job.  English actor David Oyelow0 does a fine job as Louis, the older son in the family, who becomes immersed in Civil Rights movement after going off to college.  Louis’ strand of the story is the most interesting part of the film. It’s a good film, but not great (as several viewers agreed).  It didn’t evoke much emotion from me, aside from the shocking early tragedy and the lunch counter/protest scenes.  Something (intangible) is missing!

Diana (NOW PLAYING)

Diana - 2013

It’s refreshing to see a South Asian man, English actor Naveen Andrews (who plays Dr. Hasnat Khan, a brilliant Pakistani surgeon/PhD student), on the big screen.  And portrayed as a love interest to Naomi Watts (Diana, Princess of Wales)- pretty neat, right?  No, sadly, this film is a bore.  Maybe it’s the pedestrian dialogue?  Or the slow pacing?  It looks like a TV movie, as one journalist and many viewers commented.  Watts gets Diana’s mannerisms and girlish vulnerability right, but she has little else to work with here.  What a waste of talent! 

Django Unchained

Django-Unchained-Tarantino

django-unchained-ld

django-unchained-3

Oh, it’s well produced, filmed and edited. But that can’t save the totally bizarre banality of the story and the plot – never mind the gratuitous violence. 

Exactly- the (bloody/brutal) wrestling scene between the two men in Candie’s private club was almost too much to take! 

I thought DiCaprio and Waltz were brilliant, but brilliant performances can’t save a bad film. 

Christoph Waltz did a fine job (as in Inglourious Basterds).  It’s a difficult task to act in one’s second language, also.  And DiCaprio gets better with age. 

I liked the father/son symbolism when Schultz told Django the Brunhilde Story.  It was tender and touching…

Django wasn’t the hero- Dr. Schultz was, I was surprised to discover.  Tarantino’s direction/writing and Foxx’s acting turned the lead man into the sidekick.  Oops!   

What was that scene with the masked vigilantes even there for?  The scene was a complete waste if footage… comic relief that fell flat on its face.

There is not much to laugh at in this disjointed film.  If you can’t deal respectfully with a topic like slavery… I don’t know what to say.  And talk about self-indulgent- Tarantino has a distracting cameo and the film clocks in close to 3 hours!   

Candie is fascinated by Django, and sees in him, possibly, the ability and will to do what Old Ben could not.  Django can see that Candie is captivated, even when Schultz cannot.  The change that Django represents is not the kind of change that Candie will accept.

One journalist wrote that the “love story in the film is between Django and Candie,” not his wife (played by Kerry Washington, star of Scandal).  Kerry’s fans won’t have much to applaud- Broomhilda is merely a damsel in distress in the film.  What a waste of a multi-faceted actress!   

-Viewer comments from IMDB (with my analysis)

Before Midnight, Man of Steel, & ST: Into Darkness

Before Midnight

Jesse (Ethan Hawke) & Celine (Julie Delpy)
Jesse (Ethan Hawke) & Celine (Julie Delpy)

It’s almost impossible to talk about this film w/o giving things away, but I highly recommend it (as w/ the previous 2 films)!  Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Celine (Julie Delpy) are now a middle-aged (WOW!) couple raising 2 adorable young daughters (twins) in Paris.  This film takes place in Greece, where they’ve been vacationing.  Jesse is feeling bad after his son from his marriage, Hank, leaves to go back to Chicago.  

It takes three: Richard Linklater, Delpy, & Hawke at 2013 Tribeca Film Festival
It takes three: Richard Linklater, Delpy, & Hawke at 2013 Tribeca Film Festival

There are other actors (playing their friends/acquaintances) here, too, who are pitch perfect in their roles.  “They got serious!”  The young lady sitting beside my friend commented.   This is a film about grown-up life and real situations, and it’s refreshing to see (for a change). 

Man of Steel

Jor-El (Russell Crowe) with his baby son Kal-El
Jor-El (Russell Crowe) with his baby son Kal-El

First of all, this film is much better than Superman Returns (a debacle of a film I saw while visiting some cousins).  I don’t remember much that happened.  Secondly, that’s not high praise.  This film is about 75% action/special effects and 25% acting/dialogue.  Russell Crowe (an actor I usually love watching) does as well as he can w/ what he’s given. 

SVU fans (like me) were pleased to see Chris Meloni
SVU fans (like me) were pleased to see Chris Meloni

I also felt bad for Kevin Costner and Diane Lane, who’ve been out of the spotlight for several years now.  They barely have anything to do in this film- what a waste of talent.  Hey, Hollywood, if you want viewers to care about characters (esp. iconic ones), you need to put in more development.  We’re not all 12 y.o. old boys! 

Jonathan (Kevin Costner) & Martha Kent (Diane Lane)
Jonathan (Kevin Costner) & Martha Kent (Diane Lane)

Star Trek: Into Darkness

Spock (Zachary Quinto)
Spock (Zachary Quinto)

There’s something about Zachary Quinto (and it’s not just his large, expressive eyes)!  I noticed him first in Margin Call (a movie about Wall St. that I didn’t fully understand) a few months back.  He created a very well-rounded character- a young analyst (w/ a science background) who was bright, ambitious, yet honest.  I haven’t seen the first ST reboot film, but hope to in the near future.      

Benedict Cumberbatch
Benedict Cumberbatch

I was VERY excited to see Benedict Cumberbatch (one of my fave Brit actors) on the big screen again.  (He was in Atonement, playing another sort of villain, but that wasn’t a meaty role.)  This film was pretty good (exceeded my expectations).  Cumberbatch has some great dialogue, and just makes you feel for him/his people.  (Our “enemies” are NOT one-dimensional, after all.)  As for the action stuff, I esp. liked the scene where they navigate the asteroid field.  Check this film out.   

A critical piece on the casting of Cumberbatch

The Great Gatsby (2013)

Gatsby's mansion on Long Island (as imagined by director Baz Luhrmann)
Gatsby’s mansion on Long Island (as imagined by director Baz Luhrmann)

Most critics say that The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a nearly un-filmable book.  You can’t translate the words (loved by many readers of all ages) into a typical movie.  Onscreen, Gatsby’s dialogue is stilted and comes off as fake.  (It’s supposed to be like that, as he’s playing a role he wasn’t born into.  Jay Gatz’s roots are very humble.)

Tom, Myrtle, & Nick party in NYC hotel
Tom, Myrtle, & Nick party in NYC hotel

Nick (Tobey Maguire), a bit younger and more naïve than the other character, is drawn into Gatsby’s world of glittering parties, beautiful/famous women, and freely flowing alcohol.  After WWI (“The Roaring 20s”), Nick wants to be a writer, but ends up taking a job on Wall Street (stockbroker).  He rents a little cottage beside Gatsby’s opulent mansion and wonders what’s going on inside.  Finally, he gets to meet Jay Gatsby, who has a strong/emotional connection to his cousin Daisy (Carey Mulligan).

Gatsby waits nervously for Daisy's arrival at tea.
Gatsby waits nervously for Daisy’s arrival at tea

As readers know, everything Gatsby has done has been to be worthy in the eyes of Daisy, who hails from one of the “old families” of Kentucky.  They met several years ago, when Gatsby’s roots were hidden under his soldier’s uniform (“a great equalizer”).  She’s now married to a former polo player from old money, Tom Buchanan (Joel Edgerton).  However, Tom is cheating on her with Myrtle Wilson (Isla Fisher), the wife of his mechanic.

Not even a box-office powerhouse like Leonardo DiCaprio can save this film!  It’s too much- too bright/colorful, noisy, and doesn’t really go anywhere.  “It looked like Disney Land- cartoonish,” one viewer commented after the screening.  Maguire does what he can with what he’s given.  Edgerton makes Tom a blowhard and jerk (as needed), but it’s pretty much a one-note performance.  Mulligan’s talents are wasted here; she has zero chemistry with DiCaprio.  For those who came to see Bollywood star Amitabh Bachchan- he doesn’t have much to do, but looks cool in those period outfits.

Daisy sees Gatsby's house for the first time.
Daisy sees Gatsby’s house for the first time.

The director’s vision comes across (very obviously), but it’s style over substance.  The disjointed (modern) music may be the biggest flaw of all!  Laughs were elicited by the audience at some un-funny moments, I recall.  I was wondering: Where is this all going?  Some of my friends loved the book, so they may re-read it.  There are so many themes to explore in this little story, but I fear this film won’t inspire the younger generation to look into the book.  If you want to see Luhrmann’s best film, check out his debut work- Strictly Ballroom