Current:Home > StocksMovie Review: ‘The Color Purple’ is a stirring big-screen musical powered by its spectacular cast -Wealth Legacy Solutions
Movie Review: ‘The Color Purple’ is a stirring big-screen musical powered by its spectacular cast
Fastexy Exchange View
Date:2025-03-11 04:30:22
Exuberant performances from a cast led by Fantasia Barrino, Taraji P. Henson and Danielle Brooks breathe life into Blitz Bazawule’s stirring “The Color Purple,” adapted from the Tony-winning Broadway production.
Alice Walker ’s Pulitzer Prize-winning 1982 novel, which Steven Spielberg turned into the 1985 film, may be an unlikely book for such bright adaptations. Walker’s novel, told through Celie’s letters penned to God, is harrowingly bleak in its tale of trauma, poverty, abuse and rape. Much of Walker’s “The Color Purple” doesn’t scream song and dance.
But the emotional triumphs of Walker’s novel and its soul-stirring tribute to the power of Black women lend themselves to the kind of maximalist spectacle of Bazawule’s razzle-dazzle adaptation. The tragedy found in “The Color Purple” makes its final release all the more rousing.
It can still be an awkward mix, and, like Spielberg’s movie, not all of the tonal changes work in this version of “The Color Purple.” But the payoff is immense, as are the thrilling performances at the movie’s center.
Barrino, who in 2007 took over the role on Broadway, plays Celie with a raw soulfulness. In the film’s opening scenes, she’s picked by Mister ( Colman Domingo ) to be his wife, though her role at his messy, ramshackle home is much closer to servant.
Life with Mister, who regularly beats her, is a nightmare. That Domingo is able play such a loathsome, cruel character and yet still find subtle notes of woundedness and ultimately redemption in Mister is a testament to his dynamism as an actor. The roots of Mister’s barbarism are traced to his own brutal father (Louis Gossett Jr.), one of the numerous ways in which “The Color Purple” contemplates cycles of abuse and inherited pain.
Celie, separated from her beloved sister Nettie (Halle Bailey), has little to look forward to. But after years go by, signs of possibility begin entering the orbit of her savage rural corner of early 20th century Georgia.
First there’s Sofia ( Brooks ), the wife of Mister’s more sensitive son Harpo (Corey Hawkins), who builds a juke joint on a pier above a swamp. Brooks, reprising the role she played in the 2015 stage revival, is a revelation as the strong-willed, admirably reckless Sofia. Her forceful and funny entry (and her thundering song “Hell No!”) announce a female empowerment Celie hasn’t ever dared to imagine.
Bazawule’s film, penned by playwright Marcus Gardley, wavers most in the balance of its first half. The musical scenes, with kinetic choreography from Fatima Robinson, perhaps come too fast and furious, distracting from our connection with the meek Celie. The numbers are richly conceived — the juke joint (part of the excellent production design of Paul Denham Austerberry) is pierced with light shining through wooden planks. But some flights of fancy, like one number in which Celie is transported onto a giant turntable, make for a herky-jerky flow. The jumbled book-to-movie-to-musical-to-movie-musical path of “The Color Purple” sometimes shows.
But the film takes off when Shug ( Henson ) makes her show-stopping entrance. Shug, a glamorous singer who breezes in and out of their country lives, is whom Mister most pines for — and whom Celie has great affection for, as well.
Henson, outfitted sumptuously by costumer Francine Jamison-Tanchuck, gives “The Color Purple” a vivid, movie-star splash. Celie and Shug’s romance has often been downplayed — it was almost totally absent Spielberg’s film. This version, while still falling short, does a little better thanks to their tender duet “What About Love?”
In this lengthy and star-packed musical (Ciara, Jon Batiste, H.E.R. and Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor are just some of the cameos), there are more dramatic ups and downs to go. But the movie builds irresistibly toward the hard-earned emancipation of Celie, and Barrino’s climactic, impassioned performance of “I’m Here.”
Bazawule, the Ghana-born filmmaker, has made one previous feature (“The Burial of Kojo”). But he also performs as the hip-hop artist Blitz the Ambassador and directed Beyoncé’s “Black Is King” visual album. And his adroitness in capturing musical performance is easy to see in “The Color Purple,” produced by a trio of heavyweights from the first film: Oprah Winfrey, Spielberg and Quincy Jones.
But it’s the movie’s own power trio of Barrino, Brooks and Henson that makes “The Color Purple” one of the most moving big-screen musicals in recent years. Each in their own way transforms suffering into exhilarating portraits of survival and strength.
“The Color Purple,” a Warner Bros. release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association for mature thematic content, sexual content, violence and language. Running time: 140 minutes. Three and a half stars out of four.
veryGood! (79943)
Related
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Police fatally shoot man while trying to arrest him at Wisconsin gas station
- Mike Breen: ESPN laying off co-commentators Jeff Van Gundy, Mark Jackson 'was a surprise'
- Who is Jack Smith, the special counsel overseeing the DOJ's Trump probes?
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- NTSB: Pilot’s medical clearance had been renewed a month before crash landing
- Leah Remini sues Church of Scientology, alleging harassment, intimidation, surveillance, and defamation
- Family pleads for help in search for missing Georgia mother of 4
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- A zoo in China insists this is a bear, not a man in a bear suit
Ranking
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- $4 million settlement for family of man who died covered in bug bites at Georgia jail
- Federal funds will pay to send Iowa troops to the US-Mexico border, governor says
- Doritos recall: Frito-Lay recalls Nacho Cheese chips sold in Pennsylvania for allergy concerns
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- 'An existential crisis': Florida State president, Board of Trustees low on ACC future
- Ginger has been used for thousands of years. What are its health benefits?
- Transgender former student sues school after being asked to use boys' bathrooms despite alleged rape threats
Recommendation
Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
Isla Fisher and Sacha Baron Cohen Pack on the PDA During Greece Vacation
Body found in Rio Grand buoy barrier, Mexico says
2 Alabama inmates killed while working on road crew for state
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Passenger injures Delta flight attendant with sharp object at New Orleans' main airport, authorities say
Bud Light boycott takes fizz out of brewer's earnings
An end in sight for Hollywood's writers strike? Sides to meet for the first time in 3 months