Sentinel & Enterprise

‘Color Purple’ fans share praise, initial skepticism for new film

- By Gavin Godfrey

By Alicia Arnold’s count, she has seen the 1985 film “The Color Purple,” “a million times.” When the 34-year- old southwest Atlanta native first saw a trailer for the 2023 musical version, she had her doubts.

“I was like, now what are y’all doing,” she said laughing, rushing toward her 1:15 p.m. screening at AMC Madison Yards in Reynoldsto­wn, which is showing the film on four screens. In the time since Arnold’s initial bout of skepticism, the updated version of the beloved 1982 novel from Alice Walker is proving worthy of her time thanks to positive critical and box office response on the way to the second biggest Christmas Day movie debut in history.

However, Arnold is late meeting her 86-year- old grandmothe­r inside, wearing purple because the story of Black sisterhood and family is something you “basically grew up on” in the Black community. She’s eager to see Fantasia Barrino’s and Savannah native Danielle Brooks’ buzzed-about breakthrou­gh performanc­es.

“I have an open mind,” she said. “I just want to see how the people I recognize in the movie have taken this story on and created it for people like my nephews and nieces.”

Excitement and some apprehensi­on are common feelings among local fans who’ve set out to see this new version. The film currently

holds a certified fresh rating on Rotten Tomatoes with a score of 87% from critics, and 95% from audiences.

Introducin­g younger generation­s to “The Color Purple” is important for McDonough resident Annilia Wright Mosley, who took her two daughters and son to see the film the day after Christmas. Mosley jokes that she thought Black culture was headed for another “Coming to America” moment. When she heard that a re-imagining of “The Color Purple” story was coming to theaters nearly 20 years after its predecesso­r, she was skeptical.

“‘ Coming to America’ was always my very favorite movie. But then when the sequel came, I was very disappoint­ed. I was thinking, ‘I hope this is not another ‘Coming to America 2 type of situation.”

She was pleasantly surprised by both the response to the film and how much she enjoyed it. Despite seeing some chatter on social media

about tickets being hard to come by, Mosley was able to snag some online. The parking lot at Regal Mcdonough was nearly full when she arrived. Inside, women, men and children were wearing different hues of purple. “It was like a movement,” she said. The film? “A masterpiec­e.”

“The Color Purple” chronicles the diverging paths of sisters Celie and Nettie in the American South during the 1900s. The original film featured Whoopi Goldberg in the role of Celie and Akosua Busia as Nettie. This year’s version has Barrino taking on the iconic lead role, and Atlanta native Halle Bailey as Nettie.

The experience of taking her children to see the film is personal for Mosley. She grew up in Jasper, Texas, and she says she and her family experience­d the terror of racism up close. “The Color Purple” and its themes of sisterhood, overcoming racism, sexual abuse, spirituali­ty and family stays with you.

 ?? COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES — WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Taraji P. Henson, left, Fantasia Barrino and Danielle Brooks in Warner Bros.
COURTESY OF WARNER BROS. PICTURES — WARNER BROS. PICTURES Taraji P. Henson, left, Fantasia Barrino and Danielle Brooks in Warner Bros.

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