29 Days Of Black History – Day 5: Glory

Release Date:  2/16/1990
Genre:   Drama/Historical/Based On Actual Events
Rating:  R
Director:   Edward Zwick
Studio(s):   TriStar Pictures, Freddie Fields Productions, Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment
Running Time:  122 mins.

Cast:  Denzel Washington (Private Silas Trip), Morgan Freeman (Sergeant Major John Rawlins), Andre Braugher (Corporal Thomas Searles), Cary Elwes (Major Cabot Forbes), Matthew Broderick (Colonel Robert Gould Shaw), Jihmi Kennedy (Private Jupiter Sharts), Cliff De Young (Colonel James Montgomery), Alan North (Governor John Albion Andrew), John Finn (Sergeant Major Mulcahy), RonReaco Lee (Mute Drummer Boy), Donovan Leitch (Captain Charles Fessenden Morse), Bob Gunton (General Charles Garrison Harker), Jay O. Sanders (General George Crockett Strong), Raymond St. Jacques (Frederick Douglass), Richard Riehle  (Quartermaster, JD Cullum), Christian Baskous (Edward L. Pierce), Peter Michael Goetz (Francis Shaw).

Details:  Film about the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, the Union Army’s second African-American regiment in the American Civil War.   It stars Matthew Broderick as Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, the regiment’s commanding officer, and Denzel Washington, Cary Elwes, and Morgan Freeman as fictional members of the 54th.  The screenplay was based on the books Lay This Laurel by Lincoln Kirstein and One Gallant Rush by Peter Burchard, as well as the personal letters of Shaw. The film depicts the soldiers of the 54th from the formation of their regiment to their heroic actions at the Second Battle of Fort Wagner.

Story  During the American Civil War, Captain Robert Shaw, injured at Antietam, is sent home to Boston on medical leave. Shaw accepts a promotion to command the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, one of the first all-black regiments in the Union Army. He asks his friend, Cabot Forbes, to serve as his second in command, with the rank of major. Their first volunteer is another friend, Thomas Searles, a bookish, free African-American.  Other recruits include John Rawlins, Jupiter Sharts, Silas Trip, and a mute teenage drummer boy.

The men learn that, in response to the Emancipation Proclamation, the Confederacy has issued an order that all black soldiers will be returned to slavery.  Black soldiers found in a Union uniform will be executed as well as their white officers.  The soldiers are offered, but turn down, a chance to take an honorable discharge. They undergo rigorous training from Sergeant-Major Mulcahy, which Shaw realizes is needed to prepare them for the upcoming challenges the regiment will face.

Trip goes AWOL but is later caught. Shaw orders that he be flogged in front of the regiment.  He then learns that Trip left to find shoes because his men are being denied such basic supplies. Shaw confronts the base’s racist quartermaster on the soldier’s behalf.  He also supports his men in a pay dispute in which the Federal government decrees that black soldiers will only be paid $10, not the $13 per month which white soldiers receive.  When the men begin tearing up their pay vouchers in protest of this unequal treatment, Shaw tears up his own voucher in support of his men. In recognition of his regimental leadership, Rawlins is promoted by Shaw to the rank of Sergeant-Major.

Once the 54th completes its training, they are transferred to the command of General Charles Harker. On the way to South Carolina they are ordered  to sack and burn Darien, Georgia. Shaw initially refuses to obey an unlawful order, but reluctantly agrees under threat of having his command taken away. He continues to lobby his superiors to allow his regiment to join the fight, as their duties to date have involved mostly manual labor. Shaw finally gets the 54th a combat assignment after he blackmails Harker by threatening to report the illegal activities he has discovered. In their first battle at James Island, South Carolina, the 54th successfully defeats a Confederate attack. During the battle, Searles is wounded but saves Trip. Shaw offers Trip the honor of bearing the regimental flag in battle. He declines, not sure that the war will result in a better life for ex-slaves like himself.

Shaw is informed of a major campaign which involves assaulting Morris Island and capturing Fort Wagner.  The only landward approach is a strip of open beach and a charge is certain to result in heavy casualties. Shaw volunteers the 54th to lead the attack. The night before the battle, the black soldiers conduct a religious service. Several make emotional speeches to inspire others. On their way to the battlefield, the 54th is cheered by the same Union troops who had scorned them earlier.

The 54th leads the charge on the fort, suffering serious losses. As night falls, the regiment is pinned down against the walls of the fort. Attempting to encourage his men forward, Shaw is killed by numerous gunshots. Trip, despite his previous assertion that he would not do it, lifts the flag to rally the soldiers to continue, but he too is shot dead. Forbes and Rawlins take charge, and the soldiers break through the fort’s defenses. Seemingly on the brink of victory, Forbes, Rawlins, Searles, Sharts, and the two Color Sergeants are fired upon by Confederate artillery.  The morning after the battle, the beach is littered with the bodies of both black and white Union soldiers.  The Confederate flag is raised over the fort and the dead Union soldiers are buried in a mass communal grave, with Shaw and Trip’s bodies next to each other.  Source:  Wikipedia; IMDB; The Ace Black Blog.

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Steppin’ Back To Love

Release Date:  2/8/2020; TV One
Genre:  Romance
Rating:  NR
Director:  Roger M. Bobb
Studio(s):  Swirl Films, TV One
Running Time:  120 mins.

Cast:  Monique Coleman (April), Darrin Dewitt Henson (Derrick), Erica Pinkett (Kiki), Mykel Shannon Jenkins (Alonzo), Brely Evans, Blue Kimble, Jason Turner, Porsha Williams, Dorien Wilson.

Story:   A once-loving couple connected by dance, after facing marital struggles, use their passion for Chicago-style step-dancing to reignite the spark in their marriage.

Steppin’ Back To Love chronicles the tumultuous, romantic journey of Derrick and April, whose undeniable chemistry led to a sultry, storybook romance filled with a number of dance championships. Over time, external factors force them to take to the dancefloor less, when their marriage begins to slide. Their relationship is put to the test when Derrick’s success photographing a racy internet star breeds jealousy in his wife. April finds distraction from her marital issues in the form of attention from Alonzo, a handsome doctor that she spends long hours with at work. Faced so many challenges, the couple has to decide whether to take a final bow on their relationship or step back into love with one another.  Source(s):  Blackfilm.com; TV One; Interruptedblogs.com.

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Mother Of A Day

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Release Date:   2/4/20; DVD (Original Release 5/4/2019)
Genre:   Comedy
Rating:   NR
Director:   Butch Maier
Studio(s):   Sumbadhat Productions, Maverick
Running Time:  75 mins.

Cast:  Lamont Ferguson, Shanadiah Nicole, Malachi Dewitt, Karen M. Bryson, Ron Bianchi, Jasmine Chandler, Michelle Highsmith.

Story:   A man who forgets his wedding anniversary angers one woman.  Imagine angering four of the most important women in your life on the same day! That’s what happens when one man does something unthinkable and seemingly unforgivable …HE FORGETS MOTHER’S DAY!  Ben Wilson has one hour to sneak out of his house and find adequate gifts for the four moms in his life – his wife Mary, daughter Abby, mother Ruth and mother-in-law Mother Dunbar – or face their wrath!  Source:  Maverick Entertainment.

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29 Days Of Black History – Day 4: Harriet

a/k/a Freedom Fire

 

Release Date:   11/1/19
Genre:  Drama/Historical/Biography
Rating:  PG-13
Director:  Kasi Lemmons
Studio(s):  Martin Chase Productions, New Balloon, Perfect World Pictures,
Stay Gold Features, Focus Features
Running Time:   125 mins.

Cast:  Cynthia Erivo (Araminta ‘Minty’ Ross/Harriet Tubman), Leslie Odom, Jr. (William Still), Joe Alwyn (Gideon Brodess), Janelle Monáe (Marie Buchanon), Jennifer Nettles (Eliza Brodess), Vanessa Bell Calloway (Rit Ross), Clarke Peters (Ben Ross), Henry Hunter Hall (Walter), Zackary Momoh (John Tubman), Mitchell Hoog (Vince), Deborah Ayorinde (Rachel Ross), Vondie Curtis-Hall (Reverend Samuel Green), Omar Dorsey (Bigger Long), Tory Kittles (Frederick Douglass), Tim Guinee (Thomas Garrett), Joseph Lee Anderson (Robert Ross), Brian K. Landis (the Marshall), Antonio J. Bell (Henry Ross), Willie Raysor (Abraham), William L. Thomas (U.S. Senator Seward), Nick Basta (Fox).

Details:  Based on the story of iconic freedom fighter Harriet Tubman, her escape from slavery and subsequent missions to free dozens of slaves through the Underground Railroad in the face of growing pre-Civil War adversity.

Story:   In 1840s Maryland, a slave state, Araminta ‘Minty’ Ross is newly married to a freedman, John Tubman, but still a slave on the Brodess farm, along with her mother and sister.  Her father, also a freedman, approaches Mr. Brodess about her freedom, as Brodess’s great-grandfather had agreed to free Minty’s mother, Harriet ‘Rit’ Ross, and her family when she turned forty-five years old.  Even though Rit is now fifty-seven, Mr. Brodess insists they will always be slaves, and tears up the letter from a lawyer John had hired.  Brodess’s adult son Gideon mocks Minty for praying for God to take Mr. Brodess, saying God does not care about the prayers of slaves. Mr. Brodess dies shortly afterward, alarming Gideon, who decides to sell Minty as punishment. Minty, who suffers “spells” since being struck in the head as a girl, has a vision of herself escaping to freedom, and decides to run.

Minty tells John to stay behind, as he would lose his own freedom if caught escaping with her, but make plans to meet up with him later. Gideon pursues her to a bridge over a river, where he promises not to sell her.  She jumps anyway, saying she will live free or die. Minty is presumed drowned but successfully makes it to Philadelphia via the Underground Railroad, assisted by Quakers and other abolitionists. In Philadelphia, she meets Marie Buchanon, the fashionable daughter of a freed slave who was born free and is now a boarding-house proprietor.  She also meets William Still, an abolitionist and writer. William encourages her to take a new name, and she calls herself Harriet after her mother.

After a few months in Philadelphia and against the advice of Marie and William, Harriet decides to go back for John. She successfully makes it to John’s homestead only to find he has remarried, believing she was dead, and is expecting a baby with his new wife.  Devastated, Harriet decides to free her family, but her sister refuses to leave her two children. Harriet continues to return, guiding dozens of slaves to freedom as a conductor on the Underground Railroad.  Myths grow about the person responsible who becomes known as ‘Moses’.  When the Fugitive Slave Act is passed, the escaped slaves are in jeopardy of being brought back. Gideon is livid when he discovers that Harriet is Moses, especially as his fellow slave owners demand he compensate them for Harriet freeing their slaves. Gideon pursues her to Philadelphia along with the slave hunter Bigger Long, who kills Marie. Harriet flees to Canada.

In Canada, Harriet insists that the Underground Railroad continue. She continues to help runaway slaves flee all the way to Canada, though her sister dies before she can save her. Over time, the Brodess farm falls into financial ruin. Mrs. Brodess vows to catch Harriet, using her sister’s children as bait. But Harriet’s team overwhelms Gideon’s siblings and retrieves the last remaining Brodess slaves. In the final confrontation, Bigger Long winds is shot to death, but Harriet lets Gideon live, telling him of her vision that Gideon’s cause is defeated by the American Civil War.

Epilogue – Harriet personally freed more than 70 slaves on the Underground Railroad and returned as a Union spy during the Civil War, leading 150 black soldiers, who freed over 750 slaves.  Source(s):  Variety; WBUR.org; Oprahmagazine.com; Victoriaadvocate.com; USAtoday; NY Times; Wikipedia.

Trailer:

Jungle Fever

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Release Date:   2/4/20; Blu-Ray (Original Theatrical Release Date:  6/7/91)
Genre:  Drama
Rating:  R
Director:  Spike Lee
Studio(s):   Universal Pictures, 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks,
Running Time:  132 mins.

Cast:   Wesley Snipes (Flipper Purify), Annabella Sciorra (Angie Tucci), Spike Lee (Cyrus), Ossie Davis (The Good Reverend Doctor Purify), Ruby Dee (Lucinda Purify), Samuel L. Jackson (Gator Purify), Lonette McKee (Drew Purify), John Turturro (Paulie Carbone), Frank Vincent (Mike Tucci), Anthony Quinn (Lou Carbone), Halle Berry (Vivian), Tyra Ferrell (Orin Goode), Veronica Webb (Vera), Michael Imperioli (James Tucci), Nicholas Turturro (Vinny), Michael Badalucco  (Frankie Botz), Debi Mazar (Denise), Tim Robbins (Jerry). Brad Dourif (Leslie), Theresa Randle (Inez).

 

Story:  A married black lawyer named Flipper (Wesley Snipes) begins an affair with Angie (Annabella Sciorra), his white secretary. When the news is leaked through an acquaintance, Flipper’s wife (Lonette McKee) kicks him out of the house. Flipper decides to begin courting his mistress, only to be greeted by disapproval from friends, family and even strangers. The relationship continues to be strained in a society not ready to accept it, and people are hurt during the course of the romance.  In the end, Flipper tells Angie that the relationship was  based on sexual racial myths and not love, but Angie does not agree.  Source(s):  Google, IMDB, Wikipedia, tvovermind.com, bam.org, Slantmagazine.com.

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Boyz N The Hood

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Release Date:   2/4/20; Blu-Ray (Original Release Date:  7/12/91)
Genre:   Drama
Rating:  R
Director:  John Singleton
Studio(s):   Columbia Pictures, Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Running Time:  112 mins.

Cast:  Cuba Gooding, Jr. (Tre Styles), Desi Arnez Hine,s II (Tre, age 10), Angela Bassett (Reva Styles), Laurence Fishburne (Jason “Furious” Styles, Jr.), Ice Cube (Darrin “Doughboy” Baker), Baha Jackson (Doughboy, age 10), Morris Chestnut (Ricky Baker), Donovan McCrary (Ricky, age 10), Nia Long (Brandi), Nicole Brown (Brandi, age 10), Tyra Ferrell (Brenda Baker), Redge Green (Chris), Kenneth A. Brown (Chris, age 10), Dedrick D. Gobert (Dooky), Baldwin C. Sykes  (Monster), Tracey Lewis-Sinclair (Shaniqua), Alysia Rogers (Shanice), Regina King (Shalika), Lexie Bigham (Mad Dog), Raymond Turner (Ferris), Lloyd Avery, II (Ferris’ Triggerman), Jessie Lawrence Ferguson (Officer Coffey).

Story:   1984:  Ten year-old Tre Styles lives with his single mother, Reva, in Inglewood, CA. After Tre gets into a fight at school, his teacher informs Reva that Tre is highly intelligent but has a volatile temper and lacks respect for authority. Worried about Tre’s future, Reva sends him to live in Crenshaw with his father, Jason “Furious” Styles, from whom she hopes Tre will learn valuable life lessons.

Tre soon reunites with his friends, Darrin “Doughboy” Baker, Doughboy’s maternal half-brother Ricky, and Chris, their mutual friend.T hat night, Tre hears his father shooting at a burglar. They wait for the police, with two officers arriving an hour later. A white officer is civil and professional, while the black officer is hostile and displays a contempt towards black men.

The next day, Tre and his friends go out to the railroad tracks to view a dead body. While there, a group of older boys in who are part of the Crips gang steal Ricky’s football and Doughboy tries to retrieve it, but is beaten and kicked. While the older boys walk away, one of them gives Ricky his ball back. Later in the day, Furious goes fishing with Tre, telling him of his military experience in the Vietnam War.  When Tre and Furious return home, they see Doughboy and Chris being arrested for shoplifting.

1991:  At a barbecue, Doughboy is now a Crip gang member and is celebrating his recent release from jail, along with most of his friends, including Chris, who is now paralyzed and uses a wheelchair as a result of a gunshot wound. Ricky, who is now a star running back for Crenshaw High School, lives with his single mother Brenda, his girlfriend Shanice, and their infant son.  Ricky hopes to win a scholarship from University of Southern California.  Tre has grown into a mature and responsible teenager, who works at a clothing shop, and aspires to attend college with his girlfriend, Brandi. His relationship with her is strained over Tre’s desire to have sex, while Brandi wishes to wait until after marriage.

During a local street racing gathering, Ricky is provoked by Ferris, a member of the Crenshaw Mafia Gangsters. In response, Doughboy brandishes his handgun, leading to a brief confrontation between the two gangs. When the gangs are finished arguing, Ferris fires his submachine gun in the air, causing everyone to leave. Tre leaves with Ricky and notes his desire to leave Los Angeles, but they are eventually pulled over by the police. The cop is the same one who was disrespectful towards his father seven years earlier. He intimidates and threatens Tre with his gun. Tre visits Brandi’s house, and breaks down. After she consoles him, they have sex for the first time.

The next day, Ricky and Doughboy get into a fight. While Ricky and Tre walk to a nearby store, they see Ferris and his gang driving around the neighborhood and in an attempt to avoid them, the pair cut through back alleyways and split up. As Tre turns back to Ricky, Ferris’ car pulls up. Ricky turns to run but one of Ferris’ men shoots him twice with a double-barreled shotgun, killing him. Doughboy and his friends catch up with Tre too late. Devastated and helpless, the boys carry Ricky’s lifeless body back home. When Brenda and Shanice see Ricky’s corpse, they break down in tears and blame Doughboy, who unsuccessfully tries to comfort them and explain the truth. That night, a distraught Brenda reads Ricky’s SAT results, discovering he scored just enough to qualify for a college scholarship.

The boys want vengeance against Ferris and his crew. Furious finds Tre preparing to take his .357 Magnum, but convinces Tre to abandon his plans for revenge. Shortly after, Tre sneaks out to join Doughboy. That night, as the gang drives around looking for Ferris and his men, Tre asks to be let out of the car and returns home.  He realizes that his father was right to keep him from falling into an endless cycle of violence.  Meanwhile, Doughboy finds Ferris’ gang at a local fast-food restaurant.  The gang attempts to flee before Monster, one of Doughboy’s friends shoots all three, killing two (including Ricky’s killer) and mortally wounding Ferris.  Doughboy approaches Ferris.  Ferris insults him and Doughboy kills him.

The next day, Doughboy visits Tre, understanding his reasons for leaving. Doughboy knows that sooner or later he will face retaliation for Ferris’ death, and accepts the consequences of his crime-ridden lifestyle. He plaintively questions why America does not care about life in the ghetto, and sorrowfully notes he has no family after Ricky’s death and Brenda’s disowning of him. Tre embraces him, and tells Doughboy he has a brother in him.

Epilogue – Doughboy sees Ricky buried the next day and was himself murdered two weeks later.  Tre and Brandi go on to attend Morehouse and Spelman colleges in Atlanta, respectively.  Source(s):  IMDB; The Root; Wikipedia.

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