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Alice Walker's Pulitzer Prize-winning 1982 novel "The Color Purple" is a literary masterpiece. Steven Spielberg's 1985 cinematic adaptation is an emotional classic and one of the director's finest. Blitz Bazawule's "The Color Purple" (the big screen version of Marsha Norman's Broadway musical reinvention) has some excellent moments and a strong cast, but fails to capture the full emotional power of Walker's book, nor does it reach the heights
If a filmmaker or publicist contacts me regarding my reviews, it’s usually to complain—with the unhappy missive-composers often forgetting that the job of a critic is to, well, critique and not to make friends or earn pats on the back. One does not undertake this type of writing to be popular, or even liked. (I could point to my school years as evidence of this, but never mind.) If we’re lucky, a critic might see his or her name on publicity
Many people are familiar with the Kinsey Report on sexual behavior, which rocked the establishment in the early fifties, but far fewer know about 1976’s Hite Report, which effectively described the frequency and variability of female orgasm. The report’s author, feminist researcher Shere Hite, was alternately celebrated and vilified for her writing, with media outlets often outwardly hostile to her research. But she pressed on, with other reports on
Filmmaker Billy Luther's first film, 2007's "Miss Navajo," was an involving documentary that used the determination of one contestant in the Miss Navajo Nation pageant to examine the importance of keeping culture and tradition at the forefront in the Native American way of life. The honest look at identity was personal to the filmmaker, whose mother won the title in the mid sixties. With his first feature film, "Frybread Face and Me," Luther takes
The television Western genre is long past its heyday. In the fifties and sixties, TV was filled with exciting "Oaters" that glued viewers to their sets and had young kids dreaming to be one of the real-life heroes who fought bad guys with grit, smarts and a six-shooter. While shows like "The Life and Times of Wyatt Earp," "Have Gun Will Travel" and especially "Gunsmoke" would be hard-pressed to find an audience in today's television landscape
Written by Samy Burch (from a story by Alex Mechanik), the screenplay for Todd Haynes's latest work, "May December," is filled with wit and irony. Haynes's film maintains that sharp edge throughout, but stands, also, as a striking examination of the complexity of human sexuality and attraction that reveals a shattering emotional core in its characters.
The film is not-so-loosely based on the
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