National Post (National Edition)

Aretha biopic doesn't soar as high as she did

Cast: Jennifer Hudson, Forest Whitaker, Marlon Wayans Director: Liesl Tommy Duration: 2 h 25 m Available: In cinemas

- CHRIS KNIGHT

The new Aretha Franklin biopic, Respect, sets its first scene in 1952 when the future Queen of Soul was just 10 years old and already belting out songs to impressed family and friends, many of them such music luminaries as Dinah Washington and Sam Cooke.

It ends, 20 years and a whopping two hours and 25 minutes later, with the now-world-famous Franklin performing to a relatively intimate crowd at the New Temple Missionary Baptist Church in Los Angeles. There's a documentar­y crew there, headed up by director Sydney Pollack.

That concert resulted in Amazing Grace, one of the bestsellin­g gospel albums of all time. And the doc, also titled Amazing Grace, was released in 2019 after decades of technical difficulti­es and legal problems.

You could choose to leave Respect and instead head home to watch Amazing Grace on Netflix. Ironically, the restored documentar­y is actually the better movie.

There's nothing inherently wrong with Respect, but there's little that's outstandin­g about it either. As written by Callie Khouri and Tracey Scott Wilson, the screenplay hits all the standard music-biopic notes, including childhood troubles, early natural talent, a remember-this-moment prediction — “music will save your life,” says friend and fellow musician Rev. James Cleveland (Tituss Burgess) — and the climb to fame, which includes Finding Your Voice.

Jennifer Hudson is fine in the lead role, despite not looking much like Franklin. And Forest Whitaker and Marlon Wayans do good work as two of the conflicted, sometimes violent men who tried to shape her life — her father and first husband, respective­ly. But the film has less time for the singer's messy personal life, which included four children, two of them born before she was 15.

The film has Oscar-calibre pacing, and I don't mean that in a good way. Still, fans of Franklin — and they are legion — will likely thrill to the telling. For the rest of us — well, if Respect sends more people to watch the real Franklin in Amazing Grace, that's a healthy helping of respect indeed. ★★★

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada