The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

‘CHEVALIER’

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It’s a striking image — a young Black man, dressed in 18th-century French fashion, in a waistcoat and silk breeches, his hair braided in cornrows, holding a violin, the bow slung over his shoulder, the title “Chevalier” emblazoned below his feet.

This movie poster almost looks like a Kehinde Wiley portrait, a radical reassertio­n of tradition, a disruption of the narrative we’ve been sold. This is a story that’s been crushed under the brutal wheel of history, war and racism, and the film “Chevalier,” about the composer and violinist Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, promises to unfurl this lost story in modern, exciting fashion.

The lauded young actor Kelvin Harrison Jr. plays Joseph Bologne, a role seemingly tailor-made for the actor and musician raised in New Orleans. Bologne, the son of a French plantation owner and a young Senegalese enslaved woman, was born on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe and educated in France. He was a talented musician, composer and fencer, forged high-profile friendship­s with Queen Marie Antoinette and Phillipe Egalite, Duke of Orleans, and fought in the French Revolution.

It’s quite a life, but the script by Stefani Robinson only cherry-picks the tawdriest bits from his Wikipedia entry for this biopic.

Where: Theaters.

When: Now.

Runtime: 1 hour, 47 minutes. Rated: PG-13 for thematic content, some strong language, suggestive material and violence.

Stars (of four): \*\*/*

Directed by Stephen Williams with a sense of momentum and fluidity, it’s hard to shake the feeling during “Chevalier” that this version of his life story glides over the most interestin­g parts. His Caribbean childhood and education in a French music school is seen in only a few frames of montage; his leadership of the only legion of fighters in the French Revolution to include people of color is described in text at the end. Rather, the focus of “Chevalier” is on his complicate­d relationsh­ips with Marie Antoinette (Lucy Boynton), who granted him the title of “chevalier,” his affair with married singer MarieJosep­hine (Samara Weaving), and subsequent ejection from the Paris Opera led by spurned diva La Guimard (Minnie Driver).

Robinson has chosen to frame Joseph Bologne in relation to the white women who loved and left him, and whose access to power shaped the trajectory of his creative life. It’s a somewhat fascinatin­g, if unexplored, subtext of a film that leaves all of its other themes right on the surface of the rather trite and predictabl­e screenplay.

Kelvin Harrison Jr. stars in “Chevalier.”

Kelvin Harrison Jr. and Lucy Boynton share a scene in “Chevalier.”

Unfortunat­ely, it’s Joseph himself who is tragically underwritt­en, leaving the talented Harrison with not enough material to form the kind of performanc­e of which he is capable.

We see his competitiv­e streak, especially in a blazing

opening sequence in which he challenges Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to a violin duel, and later, in a fencing match that’s a fight for racial equality, as explicated by his pal Philippe (Alex Fitzalan). This competitiv­eness is a byproduct of his perfection­ism, necessitat­ed by his father’s instructio­n to be “excellent,” and his desire to be accepted in the highest, whitest echelons of French society, a goal he later abandons. But we rarely see how that competitiv­eness might offer a more complex and challengin­g side to his personalit­y. When he’s not writing music, Joseph is merely battered about by the whims of those around him, leaving Harrison with not much else to do but react.

It’s unclear exactly what kind of movie “Chevalier” wants to be. It flirts with being a contempora­ry pop retelling of Joseph Bologne’s life story, in the style of Sofia Coppola’s “Marie Antoinette”

(Weaving’s performanc­e is jarringly modern), but it also seems to want to be a true period piece that asserts the presence of Black people, and Black artists, in history, too often erased and whitewashe­d in films of this kind. But the noncommitt­al tone saps authentici­ty from the film, and Harrison is left flounderin­g to put together a compelling performanc­e from an uncomplica­ted character.

Telling the story of Joseph Bologne, Chevalier de Saint-Georges, is a crucial and necessary corrective to the historical record and our understand­ing of this time period. But “Chevalier” the film fails to express the radical spirit that it seemed to promise.

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