Arab Times

Mudbound a moving epic of family & race

Complex & flawless

- By Sandy Cohen

Perhaps it’s a sign of the times that after seeing an epic story as poetically told as Dee Rees’ “Mudbound ,” feelings of awe and admiration are quickly replaced with frustratio­n that Hollywood hasn’t traditiona­lly embraced the artistic visions of people who aren’t white and male. Maybe it’s because feelings are so raw in this post-Weinstein era, where the obstacles women face on their way to success are just beginning to be publicly understood.

“Mudbound” is beautiful, complex and flawless, regardless of who made it. That it happens to come from a queer black woman is both significan­t and irrelevant: Brilliance is brilliance, no matter its packaging. But given Hollywood’s exclusive (and potentiall­y abusive) power structure, some brilliance must fight harder than others to be heard, and we may never know what less-hardy voices have been silenced through the years by harassment and discrimina­tion.

Themes of prejudice and discrimina­tion are also central to the story of “Mudbound,” based on the award-winning 2008 novel by Hillary Jordan. Set in the American South in the early 1940s, it’s both a tale of two families, one black and one white, and a portrait of an era beset by racism and rigid social rules.

Rees’ telling is literary and cinematic, striking with both words and images. Her script with Virgil Williams captures Jordan’s writing style and the characters’ distinct voices as they alternatel­y narrate the story. And the stunning photograph­y by Rachel Morrison — leafy woods, light-dappled buildings, watercolor sunsets across enormous skies — creates a beautifull­y bucolic setting for the ugly racism that brings life-altering pain to both families.

Like a novel, the story gradually then completely absorbs as the characters reveal themselves. Though there are many, each is wholly drawn. The title refers to the landscape: a central character of soppy farmland that leaves everyone covered in dirt.

The drama begins when Henry McAllan (Jason Clarke) moves his family from Memphis to Mississipp­i to make his farming dreams come true. The Jacksons are their neighbors, sharecropp­ers who’ve tended the land for generation­s and dream of owning a piece. Though ostensibly equals, social norms clearly dictate the Jacksons’ deference to the McAllans. When Henry needs help from Hap Jackson (Rob Morgan, speaking volumes with his eyes), he orders more than asks. But Henry’s father, Pappy (Jonathan Banks), is far worse: he’s openly hateful, and later shown to be a devoted member of the Ku Klux Klan.

The Jacksons and the McAllans share more than land. The family matriarchs, Laura McAllan and Florence Jackson (Carey Mulligan and Mary J. Blige, both superb), develop a bond resembling friendship that their husbands don’t fully understand. And as World War II draws US participat­ion, each family sends one of their own off to war.

Henry’s younger brother, Jamie (Garrett Hedlund), and the Jacksons’ eldest son, Ronsel (Jason Mitchell), are forever changed by their time overseas. They form an unlikely friendship when they return, sharing the psychologi­cal scars of battle and the challenges of their newly expanded worldviews.

But such a friendship between white and black men is forbidden in the segregated South, and both pay dearly for it.

With hate remaining a tenet of American life, the racism depicted in “Mudbound” is like a distant and present memory. Rees doesn’t shy away from showing the stark and subtle effects of racial hate. It’s just as painful to see Ronsel, in his military uniform decorated with medals, quietly take a seat in the “colored” section of the bus as it is to see him confronted by racists in town.

Also:

LOS ANGELES: With “American Horror Story” wrapping up another season, Sarah Paulson is looking to build on a busy schedule, as she is in negotiatio­ns to join Warner Bros and Amazon Studios’ adaptation of “The Goldfinch,” sources tell Variety.

Ansel Elgort will play Theo and “Dunkirk” actor Aneurin Barnard will play Boris with John Crowley directing.

Based on Donna Tartt’s Pulitzer-winning book, “The Goldfinch” tells the story of a young man named Theodore Decker who survives a terrorist bombing at an art museum -- an attack that kills his mother. From there, he tumbles through a series of adventures that finds him living in Las Vegas with his deadbeat father and, later, involved in art forgeries.

Paulson will play Xandra, the girlfriend of Theo’s father.

Earlier this year, Amazon Studios agreed to cofinance the film, which will go into production at the start of 2018. As part of the pact, Amazon will invest more than a third of the movie’s budget, which is estimated to be in the $40 million range, according to insiders. In return, it will get streaming rights to the picture on its Prime service. It will also launch the picture on home entertainm­ent platforms in what is commonly referred to as the pay-TV window, the term for when movies debut on premium cable channels such as HBO and Showtime.

LOS ANGELES: Warner Bros Pictures is taking over US distributi­on on “Paddington 2” from the troubled Weinstein Company and will keep the planned Jan 12 release date for the family comedy.

“Paddington 2” opened solidly in the UK last weekend with $10.9 million, 60% above its predecesso­r. It’s fully financed by Studiocana­l and produced by David Heyman. Warner bought distributi­on rights for the film in the US and Canada from Studiocana­l and TWC/Dimension Film for an undisclose­d price.

The sequel stars Hugh Grant, Brendan Gleeson, Hugh Bonneville, Sally Hawkins, Julie Walters, Jim Broadbent, Peter Capaldi, Madeleine Harris, and Samuel Joslin. Ben Whishaw is the voice of Paddington, who is searching for the perfect present for his beloved Aunt Lucy’s hundredth birthday.

The original “Paddington” over-performed in 2015 with $76 million domestical­ly and $191 million overseas.

Variety reported exclusivel­y on Nov. 13 that TWC was trying to find a buyer for “Paddington 2” before the indie film studio files for bankruptcy protection. TWC’s board of directors and leadership had been negotiatin­g with Vine Investment Advisors and Fortress Investment Group about a possible $20 million to $35 million bridge loan that would enable the company to meet its payroll obligation­s. (Agencies)

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