RESPECT Starring Jennifer Hudson as Aretha Franklin – Available to Own on Blu-ray and Digital November 9th

“Jennifer Hudson stuns with her performance” – Brian Truitt, USA Today

JENNIFER HUDSON STARS IN RESPECT, THE REMARKABLE BIOPICAND DAZZLING CELEBRATION OF ARETHA FRANKLIN’S INCREDIBLE LEGACY – AVAILABLE TO OWN FOR THE FIRST TIMEWITH ALL NEW NEVER-BEFORE-SEEN EXTRAS. RESPECT SHOWCASES A SPECTACULAR ENSEMBLE CAST INCLUDING FOREST WHITAKER, MARY J. BLIGE, MARLON WAYANS, MARC MARON, AUDRA MCDONALD AND TITUSS BURGESS. OWN IT ON DIGITAL NOW BLU-RAY AND DVD NOVEMBER 9, 2021 FROM METRO GOLDWYN MAYER (MGM)AND UNIVERSAL PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT

Experience the cinematic music event of the year featuring Oscar® and Grammy® Award winner and vocal powerhouse Jennifer Hudson (Dreamgirls) as legendary singer Aretha Franklin in the inspiring true story RESPECT, available to own for the first time on Digital now and on Blu-ray and DVD November 9, 2021 from Universal Pictures Home Entertainment. Hailed by critics as “electrifying” (David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter) and “extraordinary” (Pete Hammond, Deadline), MGM’s musical biopic gives an authentic inside look at the life and legacy of one of the greatest, most influential recording artists of all time. 

Following the rise of Aretha Franklin’s career from a child singing in her father’s church’s choir to her international superstardom, RESPECT is the remarkable journey of the music icon’s path to find her voice. The film on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital comes packed with all-new exclusive bonus content including behind-the-scenes featurettes about Jennifer Hudson’s transformation into the Queen of Soul, director Liesl Tommy’s filmmaking process, the creation of the beautiful sets and custom wardrobes, Aretha’s experience at Muscle Shoals, and more taking audiences deeper into the empowering story and world-renowned chart-topping music that has become a global anthem for strength, independence and positivity. 

Directed by Tony Award nominee Liesl Tommy (“Insecure”, “The Walking Dead”) from a screenplay written by Emmy Award® nominee Tracey Scott Wilson (“Fosse/Verdon”, “The Americans”) and story by Academy Award winner Callie Khouri (“Thelma & Louise”), RESPECT is the biggest female-led musical drama in recent history and a must own film with extraordinary showstopping performances to watch over and over in spectacular Dolby Atmos quality sound, available exclusively on Blu-ray. 

Hand selected by Aretha herself, Hudson leads an all-star ensemble cast including Academy Award® winner Forest Whitaker (Black PantherThe Butler), Marlon Wayans (SextupletsFifty Shades of Black), six-time Tony Award® winner Audra McDonald (Beauty and The Beast, “Private Practice”), Marc Maron (JokerGlow”), five-time Emmy Award® nominee Tituss Burgess (Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”, The Addams Family), and Grammy® Award winner and Academy Award® nominee Mary J. Blige (MudboundRock of Ages) along with Tony Award® nominees Saycon Sengbloh (“The Wonder Years”, “Delilah”) and Haley Kilgore (“Amazing Stories”).  

The RESPECT Original Motion Picture Soundtrack features Jennifer Hudson’s uplifting vocal performances of 17 Aretha Franklin classic songs along with the original song “Here I Am (Singing My Way Home)” – which Hudson wrote alongside four-time Grammy® Award winner, Kennedy Center Honoree, and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Songwriters Hall of Fame Inductee Carole King and Jamie Hartman [Lewis Capaldi, Christina Aguilera]. The soundtrack is now available to own on digital/streaming services, CD and vinyl from Epic Records. 

BLU-RAY & DVD EXCLUSIVE BONUS FEATURES:

  • The Making of Respect – Explore the unique telling of this Aretha Franklin story, what the project meant to all involved and how music played a pivotal role in crafting this film.
  • Becoming Aretha – Take a behind the scenes look at Jennifer Hudson’s incredible transformation into the Queen of Soul including her commitment to the character, her connection with the late singer, and why inhabiting the legendary artist felt more like destiny than anything else.
  • Capturing a Legacy – A celebration of director Liesl Tommy’s artistry and professionalism as the cast and crew express their appreciation and admiration for her and her process.
  • From Muscle Shoals – Sit-down with the cast, crew and some of the original musicians that recorded with Aretha at Muscle Shoals to learn about this crucial time period in Aretha’s life and how it helped propel her evolution.
  • Exploring the Design of Respect – Production designer Ina Mayhew and costume designer Clint Ramos discuss the research they conducted in order to create the beautiful sets in the film as well as the various custom-made wardrobes that span three decades of style.

 RESPECT will be available on Blu-ray, DVD and Digital.

  • Blu-ray unleashes the power of your HDTV and is the best way to watch movies at home, featuring 6X the picture resolution of DVD, exclusive extras and theater-quality surround sound.
  • Digital lets fans watch movies anywhere on their favorite devices. Users can instantly buy or rent.

RESPECT – Review

R_25682_R (l-r.) Hailey Kilgore stars as Carolyn Franklin, Jennifer Hudson as Aretha Franklin and Saycon Sengbloh as Erma Franklin in RESPECT, A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert

As Summer’s season of movie escapism draws to a close, the Fall and Winter awards season gets a bit of an early start as a new film in one of Oscar’s favorite genre “hybrids” is released. On Friday we get a new entry in the “musical biography” line of award ‘”showcases”. Yes, playing a popular singer/performer has proven to be quite a “gold gatherer” for many actors and actresses. Most recently Rami Malek took the big trophy for “channeling” Freddie Mercury in 2018’s BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY and the following year it was Renee Zellweger in the title role of JUDY, as in Ms. Garland. Of course, the years have seen several tune-filled biopics take home the “gold’ from James Cagney’s George M. Cohen, that YANKEE DOODLE DANDY to Jamie Foxx as RAY Charles. So will the Academy face, and embrace, the music as the story of the “Queen of Soul”, Miss Aretha Franklin, is dramatized in RESPECT?

The film of her story begins fairly early. We’re introduced to little “Ree-Ree” (Skye Dakota Turner) at around age five, as her father, Baptist minister C.L. Franklin (Forrest Whitaker” wakes her from bedtime to sing for the adults at an “after church” boozy social.. Of course, she wows the crowd there as she does in front of Daddy’s congregation. But things aren’t harmonious at home as Ree-Ree happily spends weekends away with her mom, Barbara (Audra McDonald), the ex Mrs. Franklin. When tragedy strikes, the tot’s spirit is almost crushed until music rescues her. As a teen, Aretha (Jennifer Hudson) continues to sing at Daddy’s church, but he has bigger plans for her (aside from helping raise funds for her pal MLK). The two travel to New York, where he negotiates a contract with John Hammond (Tate Donovan) at Columbia records. While Aretha struggles to find her voice (Hammond assigns her pop standards and remakes of other singers’ hits), she reconnects with a suave “bad boy” from Detroit, Ted White (Marlon Wayans) who offers to be her new manager. This angers Daddy, but she takes a chance on Ted when Columbia drops her. Luckily he gets her a deal with Jerry Wexler (Marc Maron) at Atlantic Records, who gives her full creative control, though he suggests she travel to Alabama to record a new jazz/blues tune with the talented studio musicians at Muscle Shoals. The collaboration on “I Never Loved a Man” clicks, though Ted’s ego and fiery temper erupt, as he begins abusing his star (and now wife and mother of his son). Thus begins a tumultuous trek to super-stardom as Aretha tries to free herself from the emotional tug-of-war between Ted and the reverend while attempting to drown her inner darkness with booze and live concerts. Will her musical talents grant her peace and serenity?

As you’ve probably guessed from the marketing barrage, this biopic is meant as a showcase for its star, Hudson, in the hopes that it will rocket her back onto the movie “A-list”. It seems that, after winning a much-deserved Oscar in 2009 for DREAMGIRLS, Hollywood has had problems finding the perfect film “fit” for her. Well, after several small roles in some “indies”, and a stint in Broadway’s revival of the musical “The Color Purple”, Hudson has honed her acting skills and commands the screen as she recreates Franklin’s dynamic stage presence. Off-stage, things don’t go quite as smooth or as silky as her rich singing voice. The Franklin character seems to bounce from buoyant to broken with little reason. Hudson handles the big emotions well, but is often overshadowed by the men vying to control “the Queen”. That’s certainly true of the confrontations with the Reverend, played with intensity and passion by Whitaker, who can fill up several big tents with his “semonizin'”. Then there’s her “arch-enemy”, Ted who has a smooth, devilish charm thanks to the surprising Wayans (who was a delight in the recent ON THE ROCKS). We see him as a master of seduction, denying his gifts to Aretha to keep him on her mind. These early bits of affection make his dive into the “dark side” especially disturbing, as Ted displays his violent hair-trigger temper, that kicks in despite his wife’s “tiptoeing on eggshells” around him. Ah, but there is one “good guy’ in this story. That’s Maron as Wexler, whose endearing blunt proclamations jolt life in the often turgid tale. Who wouldn’t want a fellow like that in your corner to cut through the BS? Some of the even smaller roles stand out. McDonald brings warmth and dignity to Ree-Ree’s adored mama. Titus Burgess also scores as the sympathetic and straightforward James Cleveland. And though she’s only got a couple of scenes, Mary J, Blige is in full diva mode as the haughty Dinah Washington who steers Franklin to greatness.

Introducing a new generation to the wonders of Ms. Franklin’s artistry is quite commendable, but you know what that “road to Hell” is paved with? The script seems to roll out every “rags to riches”, “stardom suffering” cliche we’ve seen in so many better musical biographies. Plus they were done superbly in so many efforts. The abusive, controlling spouse was more compelling in WHAT’S LOVE GOT TO DO WITH IT. The “booze battles” and “on stage collapse’ just reminds us of the superior COAL MINER’S DAUGHTER. Perhaps they’re so glaring is because they seem rushed. Even at nearly 145 minutes, the life and career of the Queen, only taking us to 1972 (she passed in 2018), feels like a quick highlight “reel”. A TV miniseries might have been better suited, though the one from last year on cable with Cynthia Erivo had its fumbles. I had seen the first couple of hours and was surprised how the big-time feature movie sugar-coated much of the story, Ted’s shady former business is hinted at here, while the TV version had him in full “love-broker” (from the 1982 classic NIGHT SHIFT) mode (it’s teased with some bloody crumbled currency). And usually, I decry the overuse of smoking, int his film we merely see Hudson holding a cigarette, while the real Aretha had to later fight lung cancer. I will say that the recreation of the era’s fashions is done well, though we never see Hudson in some of Franklin’s more, “out there” outfits (during the end credit montage we see when she went blonde). I did find Ted’s ill-fitting fedoras a bit much. And the film does start to spark in a couple of scenes that try to illustrate the “creative process”. The first is with Muscle Shoals, and later we see Franklin and her two sisters working out the title tune in the pre-dawn hours (much to Ted’s annoyance). But soon we rushed through more life and career milestones, though new children seem to pop up after a record album montage that denotes time passage, almost as an afterthought. The songs (many are just presented as “snippets” and segments) are compelling, but the pedestrian direction from TV vet Liesl Tommy never injects that energy into the often overwrought (Aretha verbally blasts everyone in sight, family and staff, during some downtime at home) life story. Aretha Franklin will forever deserve our admiration and RESPECT. This film, well not so much. You’re better off downloading a greatest hits compilation,

2 Out of 4

RESPECT opens in theatres everywhere on 8/13/2021

Jennifer Hudson Is Aretha Franklin In RESPECT Movie Trailer – In Theaters August 13

To become the queen, she needed to find her voice.

Academy Award® Winner Jennifer Hudson is Aretha Franklin. Watch the new trailer now, and don’t miss RESPECT in theaters this August.

Director Liesl Tommy makes her feature film debut with Respect. Tommy is the first Black woman ever nominated for a Tony Award® for Best Direction of a Play in 2016 for Eclipsed, and is an Associate Artist at the Berkeley Rep and an Artist Trustee with the Sundance Institute’s Board of Trustees.

With a story by Callie Khouri (Oscar® winner for Writing, Thelma & Louise) and Tracey Scott Wilson, and screenplay written by Tracey Scott Wilson. Wilson and Tommy have worked together creatively since the 2009 play The Good Negro written by Wilson, directed by Tommy at The Public Theatre. Wilson was a writer on FX’s The Americans which garnered her a Peabody Award as well as Emmy® and WGA Award nominations.

The cast includes Jennifer Hudson, Forest Whitaker, Marlon Wayans, Audra McDonald, Marc Maron, Tituss Burgess, Kimberly Scott, Saycon Sengbloh, Hailey Kilgore, Heather Headley, Skye Dakota Turner, Tate Donovan and Mary J. Blige.

Hudson debuted the trailer on Good Morning America. Listen to what her favorite Aretha Franklin song is.

See it only in theaters on August 13, 2021.

R_25682_R (l-r.) Hailey Kilgore stars as Carolyn Franklin, Jennifer Hudson as Aretha Franklin and Saycon Sengbloh as Erma Franklin in RESPECT, A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert
R_17527_RC (l-r.) Henry Riggs stars as Tommy Cogbill, Jennifer Hudson as Aretha Franklin, Hailey Kilgore as Carolyn Franklin, Saycon Sengbloh as Erma Franklin, Alec Barnes as Jimmy Johnson, John Giorgio as Chips Moman, Marc Maron as Jerry Wexler and Joe Knezevich as Tom Dowd in RESPECT, A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert
R_22584_RC Tituss Burgess stars as Reverend Dr. James Cleveland and Jennifer Hudson as Aretha Franklin in RESPECT, A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert © 2021 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved

Jennifer Hudson And Mary J. Blige Shine In First Trailer For Aretha Franklin Biopic RESPECT

Jennifer Hudson stars as Aretha Franklin in RESPECT A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert / © 2020 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved

Following the rise of Aretha Franklin’s career from a child singing in her father’s church’s choir to her international superstardom, RESPECT is the remarkable true story of the music icon’s journey to find her voice.

Director Liesl Tommy makes her feature film debut with Respect. Tommy is the first Black woman ever nominated for a Tony award for Best Direction of a Play in 2016 for Eclipsed, and is an Associate Artist at the Berkeley Rep and an Artist Trustee with the Sundance Institute’s Board of Trustees. 

Check out the first trailer starring Jennifer Hudson, Forest Whitaker, Marlon Wayans, Audra McDonald, Marc Maron, Tituss Burgess, Saycon Sengbloh, Hailey Kilgore, Skye Dakota Turner, Tate Donovan, and Mary J. Blige. See the film this December.

This is going to be fantastic! Jennifer Hudson has previously won a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for DREAMGIRLS! She was also awarded a Golden Globe, BAFTA Award, and Screen Actors Guild Award for her role as Effie White in the film.

Time for the two-time Grammy award winner to clear a space for another Oscar Statuette.

This is sure to be an Oscar contender next year. Bet on Academy Award nominations for Best Picture, Hudson (Best Actress), Mary J. Blige (Supporting Actress), Forest Whitaker (Supporting Actor) and hopefully for director Liesl Tommy, and possibly cinematography, production design, costume and hair & makeup.

Jennifer Hudson stars as Aretha Franklin and Mary J. Blige as Dinah Washington in RESPECT A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert / © 2020 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved
Actor Jennifer Hudson and director Liesl Tommy on the set of RESPECT A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert / © 2020 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved
(ctr) Marlon Wayans stars as Ted White and Jennifer Hudson as Aretha Franklin in RESPECT A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert / © 2020 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved

With a story by Callie Khouri (Oscar ® winner for Thelma & Louise) and Tracey Scott Wilson, and screenplay written by Tracey Scott Wilson. Wilson and Tommy have worked together creatively since the 2009 play The Good Negro written by Wilson, directed by Tommy at The Public Theatre. Wilson was a writer on FX’s The Americans which garnered her a Peabody Award as well as Emmy and WGA Award nominations.

Jennifer Hudson stars as Aretha Franklin and Forest Whitaker as her father C.L. Franklin in RESPECT A Metro Goldwyn Mayer Pictures film Photo credit: Quantrell D. Colbert / © 2020 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Inc. All Rights Reserved

Instagram: @RespectMovie

Twitter: @RespectMovie

Facebook: @RespectFilm

CATS – Review

Judi Dench as Old Deuteronomy in “Cats,” co-written and directed by Tom Hooper.

Having seen the trailer for CATS, I must admit I approached the film with some trepidation. The highly-touted CGI effects to make humans catlike actually looked unsettling rather than magical. The good news is the effect is much less disturbing in the film itself. With music by Andrew Lloyd Weber, CATS is one of the longest-running musicals of all time, so has plenty of fans.

The musical debuted in London in 1988 and it is credited with starting the “mega-musical” craze. Along with innovative staging, it featured groundbreaking costumes, makeup, and choreography that turned dancers and singers into cat-like humans, much to the delight of audience, spawning a host of similar effects in stage shows. While I’m not personal a fan of musicals myself but I did enjoy T.S. Eliot’s classic funny quirky book of poems, “Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats” on which the musical is based.

Tom Hooper directs this screen adaptation (it was previously adapted into a film in 1998), which features a big-star cast along with some big names from the world of dance making screen debuts. Stars include James Corden, Rebel Wilson, and Taylor Swift. Judi Dench plays the beloved old cat Old Deuteronomy, who presides over the festivities, while Ian McKellen plays Gus the Theater Cat, and is the only one in the cast to actually mime cat behavior like washing his ears.

The story is built around a newcomer cat named Victoria, played with charm by dancer Francesca Hayward. Two other dancers, Larry and Laurant Bourgeois, are featured in a segment where they and Victoria invade a house and cause a little chaos, until a dog shows up.

Of course, the big showstopper song of this musical is “Memories,” and Jennifer Hudson does the honors with that one, in fine style, as the bedraggled but once beautiful Grizabella. Idris Elba plays the trouble-making Macavity.

Corden as rotund cat Bustopher Jones and Rebel Wilson as mouse-chasing Jennyanydots handle most of the comedy, although Wilson seems to dwell a lot on contorting her cat-body into rude postures. Laurie Davidson charms as magician cat Mr. Mistoffelees, and Robbie Fairchild is appealing as the show’s narrator Munkustrap.

The visual effects do not really turn people into cats, and seem to focus mostly on ears (which always seem in motion), tails, and whiskers. Otherwise, the costume/CGI combination is less cat-like than you might expect. Actually, some of the characters could have used a bit more fur, as they mostly look look people in leotards.

Still, none of that is likely to deter fans, The story is somewhat different from the stage version with perhaps a bit more of the humor in the plot-less book, but close enough to please fans.

If you are big fan of the musical, than CATS is a must-see for you. For the rest of us, it has some charming performances and good star power, but less visual effects dazzle than might be expected.

RATING: 2 1/2 out of 5 stars

First Look At Tom Hooper’s CATS – Stars James Corden, Judi Dench, Jason Derulo, Idris Elba, Jennifer Hudson, Ian McKellen, Taylor Swift

Here’s your first look at the upcoming and highly anticipated film version of CATS. The first trailer hits this Friday.

Oscar-winning director Tom Hooper (The King’s Speech, Les Misérables, The Danish Girl) transforms Andrew Lloyd Webber’s record-shattering stage musical into a breakthrough cinematic event.

CATS stars James Corden, Judi Dench, Jason Derulo, Idris Elba, Jennifer Hudson, Ian McKellen, Taylor Swift, Rebel Wilson and introduces Royal Ballet principal dancer Francesca Hayward in her feature film debut. 

CATS will be in theaters this Christmas, December 20.

Featuring Lloyd Webber’s iconic music and a world-class cast of dancers under the guidance of Tony-winning choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler (HamiltonIn the Heights), the film reimagines the musical for a new generation with spectacular production design, state-of-the-art technology, and dance styles ranging from ballet to contemporary, hip-hop to jazz, street to tap. Universal Pictures presents a Working Title Films and Amblin Entertainment production, in association with Monumental Pictures and The Really Useful Group.

Cats is produced by Debra Hayward, Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner and Tom Hooper. The screenplay is by Lee Hall (Billy Elliot, Rocketman) and Hooper, based on Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats by T.S. Eliot and the stage musical by Lloyd Webber. Cats is executive produced by Lloyd Webber, Steven Spielberg, Angela Morrison and Jo Burn. 

One of the longest-running shows in West End and Broadway history, the stage musical “Cats” received its world premiere at the New London Theatre in 1981, where it played for 21 years and earned the Olivier and Evening Standard Awards for Best Musical. In 1983, the Broadway production became the recipient of seven Tony Awards, including Best Musical, and ran for an extraordinary 18 years. Since opening in London in 1981, “Cats” has continuously appeared on stage around the globe, to date having played to 81 million people in more than fifty countries and in nineteen languages. It is regarded as one of the most successful musicals of all time.

Visit the official site:
https://www.catsmovie.com/

CHI-RAQ – The Review

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Photo credit: Parrish Lewis, Courtesy of Roadside Attractions and Amazon Studios

Spike Lee’s CHI-RAQ re-imagines Aristophanes’ ancient Greek comedy “Lystrata” as modern plea for peace in violence-torn Chicago. Chi-Raq is a term the director reportedly heard on the streets, used to compare violence-racked Chicago neighborhoods to war-torn Iraq. In the classic Greek play, the women on both sides of warring Sparta and Troy join together to end the war by staging a sex boycott. No sex for the men until there is no war. In CHI-RAQ, the Spartans and the Trojans are opposing gangs in a disadvantaged neighborhood, where their violent warfare is killing children in the streets.

It is a clever idea, moving this ancient comedy to Chicago’s bloody streets, using humor, music, sex and truth-telling to put a spotlight on the situation in these disadvantaged city neighborhoods. Sometimes a person just has to speak out, even if nothing will change, and that is what Lee is doing  – expressing his views on  gun violence, the lack of economic opportunity, the lousy schools, and the other challenges facing these neighborhoods, all within an entertaining film.

The film is funny, angry, wildly imaginative and hard-hitting. It is not a perfect film but it is a moving one, fired by Spike Lee’s passion to get people to do the right thing. It may be among the director’s best, even if success for its mission seems remote.

The director tells the story through rap, with much of the dialog in rhyme and sprinkled with some terrific musical numbers. The film uses dark, raw, biting humor and a sarcastic, truth-telling tone. There is nothing subtle about Lee’s film. He starts out with a hip-hop song about Chi-Raq, with the lyrics in large letters on screen, in case you might miss some. When the song ends, the word emergency in giant red letters flashes on screen while a voice urgently repeats the word. The film then moves to a club where a hip-hop artist named Chi-Raq (Nick Cannon) is performing the song in front of a packed house – until gunfire breaks out.

Although he denies it, Chi-Raq is associated with the Spartan gang. The Trojans are led by Cyclops (Wesley Snipes), a one-eyed tough guy. Chi-Raq tells his lady Lysistrata (Teyonah Parris) he is a musician, not a gang member, but that is not the way Cyclops sees it. When an 11-year-old girl is shot in the street in the middle of the day and no one arrested, Lysistrata organizes the women, including Cyclops’ wife Irene (Jennifer Hudson), to stop the war by staging a “sex strike” – no peace, no nookie (although the director uses a more graphic term).

The same boycott was used in Africa recently, when the women of Liberia organized a sex strike that ended their civil war. Lee makes reference to that real-world event in the film, although neighborhood wise woman Miss Helen (Angela Bassett) is clearly aware of the theatrical/historical roots. Lee has assembled a stellar cast, which also includes a wonderfully sly Samuel L. Jackson as narrator Dolmedes, who provides biting, sarcastic commentary, and John Cusack as a priest who grew up nearby and returned to lead a black church standing up to the violence. If there is a flaw in that cast, it is that it could use a few more young stars to connect more with a younger audience.

The film is clearly Spike Lee speaking out and hoping to do something to stop the violence racking city neighborhoods in Chicago, Philadelphia and Baltimore, all mentioned in the film. The director makes gun violence a center of his commentary, with gun-profiteers crossing state lines to buy them at gun shows, to evade Chicago’s strict gun laws, and selling them on the street. But he says more, with characters or the narrator commenting on neglected neighborhoods, places gripped with fear of gangs who do not care about innocent life lost as “collateral damage,” and police equipped with military surplus coming out in force to stop a protest but absent and ineffective when a little girl is shot. In one chilling bit of dialog, the narrator notes their children go from “third-rate schools to first-rate prisons,” and “now they are privatized, so it is profitable too.”

At the same time, it is clear Lee sees that chances of success, that the film will prompt real change, are not good. In one scene, Cusack delivers a fiery sermon to his congregation, listing the range of problems racking the neighborhood including the code of silence that protects the guilty, but we also notice he is “preaching to the choir.” In a classic Western, the people in the packed church, whipped into a frenzy of outrage, would pour out of the church and go get the bad guys. Instead, they simply go home. Lee is too good a filmmaker for that not to be a conscious reference. Near the film’s end, the sex boycott has spread around the world, and multinational companies promise jobs for the people in the neighborhood – and not minimum wage jobs. That seems a bit of highly unlikely wish-fulfillment on the director’s part, as well as a dig at those who could do more.

CHI-RAQ is powerful, even heart-breaking stuff wrapped in a dark, hip-hop musical comedy. Even if it seems unlikely to actually change anything, at least Spike Lee had his say.

CHI-RAQ opens in theaters on Friday, December 4th, 2015.

OVERALL RATING:  4 OUT OF 5 STARS

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Check Out The Official Poster For Spike Lee’s CHI-RAQ; Plus First Single From Soundtrack

chi-raq

Here’s a first look at the official poster for Spike Lee’s CHI-RAQ, featuring Teyonah Parris. (via Indiewire’s Shadow & Act)

Watch the Music Video for “We Gotta Do Better” by Kevon Carter as heard in CHI-RAQ.

The movie stars Nick Cannon, Wesley Snipes, Jennifer Hudson, Teyonah Parris, D.B. Sweeney, Harry Lennix, Steve Harris, Angela Bassett, John Cusack and Samuel L. Jackson.

CHI-RAQ is a modern day adaptation of the ancient Greek play “Lysistrata” by Aristophanes. After the murder of a child by a stray bullet, a group of women led by Lysistrata organize against the on-going violence in Chicago’s Southside creating a movement that challenges the nature of race, sex and violence in America and around the world.

Rated R for strong sexual content including dialogue, nudity, language, some violence and drug use.

Amazon Studios and Roadside Attractions will release CHI-RAQ in theaters December 4, 2015.

For more info:

http://chiraqthemovie.com/
Facebook.com/chiraqthemovie
Instagram @chiraqthemovie
Twitter @chiraqthemovie
SnapChat @chiraqthemovie
#chiraqthemovie

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Spike Lee’s CHI-RAQ Gets A First Poster And Trailer

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Watch the trailer for Spike Lee’s CHI-RAQ.

The movie stars Nick Cannon, Wesley Snipes, Jennifer Hudson, Teyonah Parris, D.B. Sweeney, Harry Lennix, Steve Harris, Angela Bassett, John Cusack and Samuel L. Jackson.

CHI-RAQ is a modern day adaptation of the ancient Greek play “Lysistrata” by Aristophanes. After the murder of a child by a stray bullet, a group of women led by Lysistrata organize against the on-going violence in Chicago’s Southside creating a movement that challenges the nature of race, sex and violence in America and around the world.

Rated R for strong sexual content including dialogue, nudity, language, some violence and drug use.

Amazon Studios and Roadside Attractions will release CHI-RAQ in theaters December 4, 2015.

For more info:

http://chiraqthemovie.com/
Facebook.com/chiraqthemovie
Instagram @chiraqthemovie
Twitter @chiraqthemovie
SnapChat @chiraqthemovie
#chiraqthemovie

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Street Closure Plans For 87th Oscars; David Oyelowo, Chris Pratt, John Travolta and Kerry Washington To Present

86th Oscars, Arrivals

Jennifer Aniston, Sienna Miller, David Oyelowo, Chris Pratt, John Travolta and Kerry Washington will be presenters at this year’s Oscars, show producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron announced today.

Aniston has starred in such films as “Cake” (2014), “We’re the Millers” (2013), “Horrible Bosses” (2011), “Marley & Me” (2008) and “Bruce Almighty” (2003). She also starred in all ten seasons of “Friends,” for which she won the 2002 Emmy® Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series.

Miller co-stars in “American Sniper” and “Foxcatcher,” both of which have garnered multiple Oscar nominations this year. She previously appeared in such features as “Factory Girl” (2006) and “Layer Cake” (2005). Her upcoming films include “High-Rise,” “Adam Jones” and “Lost City of Z.”

Oyelowo portrayed Martin Luther King, Jr. in this year’s Best Picture nominee “Selma.” His other recent feature credits include “A Most Violent Year” (2014), “Interstellar” (2014), “Lee Daniels’ The Butler” (2013) and “Jack Reacher” (2012). He will next be seen in “Captive” due out later this year.

Pratt starred in two of 2014’s biggest box office hits, “Guardians of the Galaxy” and “The Lego Movie.” He previously appeared in the Best Picture nominees “Her” (2013), “Zero Dark Thirty” (2012) and “Moneyball” (2011), and co-starred in all seven seasons of the comedy series “Parks and Recreation.” He will next be seen in “Jurassic World,” in theaters June 12th of this year.

Travolta is a two-time Oscar nominee, for his leading roles in “Pulp Fiction” (1994) and “Saturday Night Fever” (1977). He also has starred in such features as “Savages” (2012), “The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3” (2009), “Hairspray” (2007) “Face/Off” (1997), “Get Shorty” (1995) and “Grease” (1978). His upcoming film, “The Forger” will be out later this year.

Washington is the star of the hit television drama “Scandal,” and received two Emmy® nominations for her role. Her film roles have included “She Hate Me” (2004), Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005), “I Think I Love My Wife” (2007), “Lakeview Terrace” (2008), “For Colored Girls” (2010) and “Django Unchained” (2012).

85th Academy Awards, Arrivals

It was also announced that Oscar and Grammy-winning singer and actress Jennifer Hudson will be performing on the 87th Oscars.

“We’re creating several musical sequences for the Oscars and we couldn’t be happier that our friend, Jennifer Hudson, will be performing in one of them,” says Zadan and Meron.

Hudson won the Oscar for Actress in a Supporting Role for the 2006 film “Dreamgirls.” Her other acting credits include “Sex and the City” (2008), “The Secret Life of Bees” (2008), “Winnie Mandela” (2013) and “The Inevitable Defeat of Mister & Pete” (2013). Hudson’s self-titled debut album won the 2008 Grammy Award for Best R&B Album and was certified Gold, as was her second album, “I Remember Me.” This year she was nominated for Best R&B Performance for the song “It’s Your World,” from her 2014 album, “JHUD.”

85th Academy Awards, Wednesday Set Ups

To ensure public safety, support security strategies and facilitate the production of this year’s Oscars, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences and the City of Los Angeles have finalized street closure plans around the Dolby Theatre at Hollywood & Highland Center in Hollywood.

To accommodate the construction of press risers, fan bleachers and pre-show stages along the Oscars red carpet, Hollywood Boulevard will be closed between Highland Avenue and Orange Drive beginning at 10 p.m. on Sunday, February 15, and remain closed until 6 a.m. on Tuesday, February 24.

MTA subway trains will bypass the Hollywood & Highland station after the last regularly scheduled train onSaturday, February 21, until 6 a.m. Monday, February 23.  Service at the station will resume with the first scheduled train after 6 a.m.

Between Sunday, February 15, and Oscar Sunday, February 22, additional streets and sidewalks will be closed for varying periods.

Details of the closures and maps of affected areas are available from the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, the Sixth and the Thirteenth District City Council field offices and on the Academy’s website at www.oscars.org/closures.

86th Oscars¨, Tuesday Set Ups