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Movie Review: Honeydripper

Saturday, February 02, 2008 1:00 PM | 11 comments
By Darralynn Hutson


Directed, Written and Edited by: John Sayles

Starring: Danny Glover, Charles S. Dutton, Yaya DaCosta (pictured), Lisa Gay Hamilton and introducing Gary Clark, Jr.

Supporting cast includes: Eric Abrams, Kel Mitchell, Ruben Santiago-Hudson, Davenia McFadden, Vondie Curtis Hall and Sean Patrick Thomas

 
“It was early Friday evening, and the howl began to bark.

Stack O’ Lee and me was squabbling in the dark.

First he took all my money then he spit on my Stetson hat,

Stack O’ Lee told me a lie. Oh, what do you think about that?”

-- from “Stack O’ Lee”  performed by Keb Mo’ in the motion picture Honeydripper

 

“I always hated that damn song,” says husband and father Tyrone Purvis, answering his visual sub-conscience in the deliciously wholesome independent period film Honeydripper.

 

Never a truer phrase has been spoken in this cinematic treasure set in 1950 Harmony, Alabama.  Songs have lots of talking to do, especially to a man who is experiencing hard times. And things are hard for a juke joint owner and old time piano player, portrayed beautifully by veteran actor Danny Glover.

 

The film’s plot is rooted around one weekend that will either save or kill him. Unlike other weekends, he’ll lie, steal and almost cheat to keep his head above water and extend the life of his dream for ownership. Although it’s set over 50 years ago, Honeydripper keeps it real to all of us who understand struggle.

 

The mixture of a great supporting cast, moving musical score and the unrelenting drive to succeed are all present and make Honeydripper a must see classic. However, the powerful performances, poetic portrayal of Alabama heat in the summer and do-or-die attitude make this film the heavyweight champion of 2008, thus far.

 

If the proof of lasting power is in the acting and scenery, then Honeydripper is on my A-list.

 

The American dream pursuit story is engaging. Down on his luck due to debt and a lifetime of bad decisions, music man Tyrone could really use a break. His club has a lousy act, no patrons and an outdated ambiance. The spot across the way is hyped with flash, synthetic sounds and plenty of liquor.

 

With a little help of his friend Maceo (Charles S. Dutton), his wife Delilah (Lisa Gay Hamilton), his daughter China Doll (Yaya DaCosta) and a stranger, Sonny Blake (Gary Clark, Jr.), who is also electric; Tyrone concocts a one-night-only get rich scheme. Mounting pressures from debt collectors, sickness and modern music-making devises bring things to a head. Tyrone and his juke joint eat at his family life, which results in tragic consequences.

 

John Sayles’ adaptation of America’s deep south is slower and lazier than it is passionate and heated. Although the live performances in this film are a charging sight, it is no substitute for R-rated sex. You won’t find any in this movie.

 

Danny Glover successfully portrays Tyrone in a James Evan-esque vein, working his plan from upstanding husband to convincing hustler with everything to lose. But it is his wife, Delilah played by Lisa Gay Hamilton with her “married-to-the-game” demeanor and brewing fire that steals the show. Both actors create a comfortable yet jarring narrative that allows you wholly to believe and relate to the characters. You want them to win.

 

Honeydripper could be a classic. For its status as one of 2008’s first painfully independent films, the efforts to get it to movie screens for the American masses should be applauded. The official release date has been moved a couple of times as the screenings and limited release showings creep across the nation, but according to IMDB.com it's looking like an April release now.


Regardless of the quality of the acting and the power of the musical themes, if there’s no audience at the theatres, this gem will go unnoticed. If you fancy some glorious Technicolor and great acting, go and watch Honeydripper when it hits your town - even if only to see YaYa DaCosta light up the screen.


Comments

 

poe said:

February 2, 2008 1:27 PM
 

thehiphopnerd_08 said:

sounds good from this review...I'll check it out, if it makes it way to my city...


http://thehiphopnerd.blogspot.com/
February 2, 2008 3:27 PM
 

SPATE Magazine All Day said:

Maybe I will peep it.

SPATE MAGAZINE
http://www.spatemag.com
February 2, 2008 3:43 PM
 

OJ is innocent. It was Truers » Blog Archive » Movie Review: Honeydripper said:

February 2, 2008 4:06 PM
 

jubilee.shine said:

this was a high quality film.  also check sayles' other works, especially matewan & eight men out.

"i'd do anything for my china doll".

honeydripper trailer- http://youtube.com/watch?v=lsyEx3JdQLk

matewan- http://youtube.com/watch?v=qwEMIvDEFy4
February 2, 2008 4:36 PM
 

BlackPeople 1 said:

boom.
we was just talking about this.

no wonder the screenings were limited.
it goes wide in april.

supposedly, right?

yo, i hope this is not another sleeper like Talk To Me.

Talk To Me was film of the year last year. But ain't nobody see it. I hope it comes out on DVD soon if it ain't already.

Everybody in it.

Don Cheadle
cedric
mike epps
chiwetel ejiofor (british denzel)
martin sheen
i forgot the girls name.

but yo this shit is a drama but it's funny as shit.

-Black People
February 2, 2008 5:11 PM
 

Dove said:

@ BlackPeople1

That was Taraji Henson in Talk To Me. We interviewed her about the movie (and other things) here:

http://allhiphop.com/stories/lifestylefilm/archive/2007/06/24/18178438.aspx?Ajax_CallBack=true
February 2, 2008 7:38 PM
 

BlackPeople 1 said:

thanks!

That's right from it's hard out here for a pimp.
hustle and flow.

yo,lemme peep the interview.
good lookin out.


-Black People
February 2, 2008 8:05 PM
 

BlackPeople 1 said:

wait, wait, wait.

that was a little too hip for me. I think it went over my head.

was she sayin alicia keys is gay?

or is that common knowledge and I'm just late?

-Black People
February 2, 2008 8:15 PM
 

Dove said:

LOL! Naw, she was talking about the characters they played in Smoking Aces. Taraji's character was gay and had a crush on Alicia Keys' character. If you see the movie you'll get it.
February 2, 2008 9:47 PM
 

friday night lights movie review | News of course said:

February 17, 2008 8:10 PM
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