Total Film

MA RAINEY’S BLACK BOTTOM

OUT NOW CINEMAS 18 DECEMBER NETFLIX

- Kate Stables

Singing the praises of Chadwick Boseman’s final screen performanc­e.

Your heart breaks a little when Chadwick Boseman’s ambitious jazz trumpeter Levee insists fiercely to his bandmates: “I got my time coming to me...” Taken from us far too soon, the late actor brings an astonishin­g, electrifyi­ng energy to his final performanc­e.

He’s the dynamo firing up this punchy screen adaptation of August Wilson’s classic play about the exploitati­on of 1920s singing legend Ma Rainey, the ‘Mother of the Blues’, and her long-suffering band. It’s a worthy capper to Boseman’s career, another role that brings Black history in from the margins, like Marshall (2017) or the Jackie Robinson biopic 42 (2013).

Largely confined to a white-owned Chicago studio in an against-the-clock session that Ma (Viola Davis) constantly threatens to scupper, the film makes a virtue of the play’s claustroph­obia, using the shut-in space as a tense emotional battlegrou­nd.

Director George C. Wolfe attempts to fend off the a stagey, talky feel by

keeping his camera restlessly mobile, a strategy that’s mostly successful. The camera prowls, slinks and ducks around the bickering band, as Levee fights for his new swinging jazz sound while Ma battles for respect for herself, and her beloved soul-soothing ‘blues’. Gold and ochre visuals point up both the fierce heat and rush of Chicago streets and the sharp shadows of the stifling studio.

Wolfe also enlists the session’s relentless tick-tock time pressure to push this lean, tight movie on relentless­ly, as the stammering voice intros of rookie Sylvester (Dusan Brown) create a comic pile of wrecked vinyl, and Levee makes a rash lightning move on Ma’s bored girlfriend Dussie Mae (Taylour Paige). Bringing the rage from the stage, the band members’ argumentat­ive storytelli­ng is filled with heartfelt Black struggle. Rape, revenge and near-lynchings are unrolled, a grim Black Lives Matter topicality giving them unsettling resonance nearly a century after the film’s setting.

But the film is swept along by its two potent central performanc­es, Davis generating hefty diva-power with her proud, blues-preaching Ma, determined not to be reduced to a ripped-off voice. Boseman’s wiry, angry Levee brings the film’s real charge however, giving every rippling horn improv, God-taunting rant, and soft-shoe shuffle the urgency of a man racing to make his mark with his art. The desperate, eloquent force of his performanc­e gives this muscular film added punch and poignancy.

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