Posts Tagged ‘R&B’

Young Man With a Horn

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
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This is a excellent drama! Rick Martin (Kirk Douglas) is a man who as a child peeked through the window one night into a Night Club and saw a person playing the Trumpet! Well he sees what is happening and he wants to play!

The man teaches him and he turns into a big famous movie actoress! Well it ends up in a big nice story!

This is an excellent movie and I promise you that you will deffinately love it he gets married to Amy North (Lauren Bacall) but then finds out that she is the wrong woman for him the girl who he really loves is Jo Jordan (Doris Day) this is a great movie that you will enjoy!

Cast

  • Kirk Douglas: Rick Martin
  • Lauren Bacall: Amy North
  • Doris Day: Jo Jordan
  • Hoagy Carmichael: Willie Willoughby
  • Juano Hernandez: Art Hazzard
  • Jerome Cowan: Phil Morrison
  • Mary Beth Hughes: Marge Martin
  • Nestor Paiva: Louis Galba
  • Orley Lindgren: Young Rick
  • Walter Reed: Jack Chandler

Ray

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
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I really enjoyed watching Jamie Fox play Ray Charles simply because he did such a great job being Ray Charles. It totally felt like you were watching the life of Ray Charles. The movie was cool because I learned so much I did not know. I have listened to a little Ray Charles, as most people have. I enjoy his innovative R & B and Gospel Sound. One of the qualities the film promotes well, something I had known, is the excellent versatility and range of styles Charles could play.

I really was not aware how much of how much a junkie and drug abuser the singer really was. The film really did a great job in capturing the severe faults of the artist as well as capturing the ways he overcame his obstacles. All of the acting was superb, and Jamie Fox really really shines, showing his amazing talent. So much of film is pure junk but I no doubt feel this feature adds a lot to the life of Charles and the potential for films.

The actress who played Charles wife and mother also did excellent jobs, as well as the fellow who played Quincy Jones. Even more could have been added but I also understand the reasons for editing for time. I liked the scene at the end with the Georgia State Legislators. Julian Bond is a punk though, too bad he has to be such a political hack. Anyways this is a quality film I enjoyed the deep portrayal of all of the singers faults and demons.

Cast

  • Jamie Foxx as Ray Charles
  • Sharon Warren as his mother, Aretha Williams
  • Kerry Washington as his wife, Della Bea Robinson
  • Regina King as Margie Hendricks
  • Renee Wilson as Pat Lyle
  • Larenz Tate as Quincy Jones
  • Harry Lennix as Joe Adams
  • Clifton Powell as Jeff Brown
  • Curtis Armstrong as Ahmet Ertegün
  • Richard Schiff as Jerry Wexler
  • Kurt Fuller as Sam Clark
  • Patrick Bauchau as Dr. Hacker
  • Terrence Dashon Howard as Gossie McKee
  • Chris Thomas King as Lowell Fulson

Mo’ Better Blues

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
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With Lee’s first three films, it is obvious that this man has a passion for music. With his fourth film, “Mo’ Better Blues”, Lee takes on this passion fully and it is a treat for us viewers and lovers of Jazz. Interestingly, this is a film about passion, that is the life of a passionate person. Like many prolific scholars, artists, and writers Denzel Washington’s character, Bleek, makes everything secondary to his music. He is self-absorbed using two woman, both of whom he seems to love, only when HE needs them. Anyone out there who has experienced a person like Bleek, whose every move revolves around his or her job, hobby or love, will appreciate this film.

This is Spike Lee’s first full-fledged dram. Generally I enjoyed this movie, though not as much as “Do the Right Thing”. (I know, its always dangerous and rarely right to compare a director’s films with one another, it’s best to take them individually). I enjoyed how closely the music reflected the mood. the pain as Bleek strained to play a year after he was beat up, the dizzying scene when he could not tell who he was in bed with and the scene when he was lying on the floor with headphones on and scattered albums all around him. I also was happy that Lee went full-circle and went ahead in time at the end of the film to show us how things turn out in the future. This is an very simple and often considered “corny” technique in film making, however I think it is underused and completes a story.

A last thought, Spike Lee seems to develop one character in each of his films (in this film it is Bleek) so well, that the other characters seem of little importance.

Cast

  • Denzel Washington — Bleek Gilliam
  • Spike Lee — Giant
  • Wesley Snipes — Shadow Henderson
  • Giancarlo Esposito — Left Hand Lacey
  • Robin Harris — Butterbean Jones
  • Joie Lee — Indigo Downes
  • Bill Nunn — Bottom Hammer
  • John Turturro — Moe Flatbush
  • Dick Anthony Williams — Big Stop Williams
  • Cynda Williams — Clarke Bentancourt
  • Nicholas Turturro — Josh Flatbush
  • Jeff ‘Tain’ Watts — Rhythm Jones
  • Samuel L. Jackson — Madlock
  • Leonard L. Thomas — Rod
  • Charlie Murphy — Eggy
  • Coati Mundi – Roberto

Lady Sings the Blues

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
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Diana Ross is simply the best person to play this part. In fact she was the first choice! It earned her a nomination for best actress. For anyone to say that she isn’t a great actress has to re-evaluate what it means to be a great actor.

Furthermore, no one really knows who or what the real Billie Holiday looks like. Famed fashion designer Bob Mackie mentioned that he himself doesn’t even know what Miss Holiday looks like. I personally think Diana’s voice was better than Miss Holiday’s, although Suzanne de Passe mentioned before during the filming of the movie that Berry Gordy wanted Diana to sound more like Diana Ross, not Billie Holliday.

Diana took this film with a vengence and she silenced her critics. If this movie was to be an accurate portrayal of Miss Holliday then we would have to have a few more leading men other than Billy Dee Williams and the film would’ve been much longer. Berry Gordy and Paramount Pictures did a great job in portraying her and most people would agree that this movie depicts Diana Ross’ acting talents and portrayal of Billie Holiday at it’s best.

Cast

  • Diana Ross – Billie Holiday
  • Billy Dee Williams – Louis McKay
  • Richard Pryor – Piano Man
  • James T. Callahan – Reg Hanley (as James Callahan)
  • Paul Hampton – Harry
  • Sid Melton – Jerry
  • Virginia Capers – Mama Holiday
  • Yvonne Fair – Yvonne
  • Isabel Sanford – The Madame
  • Tracee Lyles – The Prostitute
  • Ned Glass – The Agent
  • Milton Selzer – The Doctor
  • Norman Bartold – The Detective #1
  • Clay Tanner – The Detective #2
  • Jester Hairston – The Butler

Dreamgirls

Saturday, March 7th, 2009
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Simply stated – this movie, this musical, bowled me over and completely enveloped me in its acting, its production value and its music. In my opinion, Dreamgirls creators have done the impossible – they have taken an award winning Broadway musical and made it better than the Broadway show that it was based upon.

The production on screen allowed for a more complete telling of the story behind these women, their successes and their fears. Success in this movie is directly associated with sacrifice – what will these women surrounder to in order to get the dream they want and what will it take for them to claim control over their lives in order to fulfill their destinies.

There are however three production issues that could have been done differently that would have more firmly knitted the music to the storyline:

* First, Beyonce’s “Listen” number was misplaced in a recording studio; its should have played out that evening when she told Curtis she was leaving.

* Secondly, Effie should have received another number – and expansion of “Effie White is Going to Win” in Curtis’ office.

* Finally, the producers should have addressed the most blatant oversight – a musical number for Lorelle. It appeared in the stage version and was cut from th script or the film. Anika Noni Rose did an outstanding job in her role, and the lack of a solo hurt her chances at the recognition that she should have received.

Finally, after you see this movie you need to listen to the soundtrack and see how well the songs express the drama. “And I’m Telling You” is NOT the best song in the movie. That honor belongs to “I am Changing” The unsettling “We Are Family” is meant to stop the story, send a double message, and set the stage for Effie’s impending removal from the group. It works if you understand it, otherwise it feels misplaced.

The message of the movie is that everyone has dreams, and that those dreams can come true if you seize your destiny and make those dreams come true for yourself.