COMMENTS: 10
'Precious': How a Film About an Obese Harlem Teenager Turned the Tables on Hollywood
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In Precious: Based on the Novel "Push" by Sapphire, Gabourey Sidibe plays the title role of the obese Harlem teenager caught up in a cycle of abuse, incest and poverty. The New York Times, among others, raved about this, her first film performance, calling it “terrific” and “dazzling.”
Sidibe, who knows she is no one’s idea of a movie star, says the best thing about actually starring in a movie is the example it sets for her two younger sisters, 13-year-old twins, who sleep in the same Harlem bedroom she did growing up.
“What is so great about me doing this film,” she says, is that “I’m an actual example for them to see that they can be whatever they want to be, no matter what they look like. When you think Hollywood actress, you don’t think of a girl that looks like me, but now you can. There’s hope for my sisters.”
Out in San Francisco for the screening of the film at the opening night of the Mill Valley Film Festival, Sidibe, along with director Lee Daniels and Paula Patton who plays Precious’ teacher at an alternative school, all seem a little surprised and gratified at the attention to their film, which has won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance and the People's Choice Award at the Toronto Film Festival.
Daniels says he appreciates the accolades, but what really thrilled him was Sapphire’s reaction. She felt the book should stay a book, not a movie, and it took Daniels eight years to change her mind.
“I had to explain to her, ‘Listen, your book is etched in stone for forever. Nobody is going to say the book sucks because the movie sucks. You still created a frigging masterpiece,’” Daniels says. “At the end of the day, my biggest award was her loving this movie. She came into my arms and cried.”
Daniels doesn’t seem poised to do a romantic comedy any time soon. He produced The Woodsman about a pedophile and Monster’s Ball about a racist white prison guard’s affair with the African American wife of the last person he killed. He directed Shadowboxer, the story of a stepmother and her stepson who are lovers and assassins. Clearly, Daniels doesn’t shy away from challenging subjects. But Precious, which deals with illiteracy, rape, abuse and poverty—none of them topics known for being big box office draws—seems like it could be the most challenging one yet. The New York Times Magazine recently ran a cover story called “The Audacity of ‘Precious’” that asked “Is America ready for a movie about an obese Harlem girl raped and impregnated by her abusive father?”
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Posted by: LeonBNJ on Nov 19, 2009 3:54 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Films like 'Precious' are a badly needed alternative to the regular Hollywood garbage. Not everyone who goes to movies wants the usual junk, they want to be more than entertained. I suspect this film will be among the Oscar (r)Nominees for best picture, for it's actresses, screenplay and maybe director.
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Posted by: weathered on Nov 19, 2009 7:07 AM
Current rating: 3 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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Posted by: LIBBIEBETH on Nov 19, 2009 9:31 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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» Hollerin'
Posted by: eklawson
» Not hollerin'
Posted by: knittsox
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Posted by: Spiritgirl on Nov 19, 2009 11:18 AM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As for African-Americans (especially women), Latinos, and Asians - those white men in Hollywood have a "type" that they go with, and they refuse to recognize anyone outside of that box that they have created. Examples would include, but not be limited too: Halle Berry - or her type light skinned, long/short straight hair, features that aren't "too ethnic", or Jessica Alba, Penelope Cruz, Jennifer Lopez - the type that unless they actually use their accent you might not think of them as Latina, or Lucy Lu, or Kelly Hu - Asian, but not "too much" for Hollywood. It really isn't about whether they "act well", it is about a stereo-typical look that they are going for along with a stereo-typical picture that will make gads and gads of money for the moguls.
Maybe it is that more Americans are feeling more disconnected from each other that's making more people relate to "Precious", but the truth is that "the beauty" of not just African-Americans, but all people are not celebrated at least not by the "Hollywood standards"!
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» Partially Right
Posted by: felipe
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Posted by: Gravitas on Nov 19, 2009 3:31 PM
Current rating: 5 [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How sad though that weight is such a master status the description had to include "obese" before anything else!
And yes, we are all beautiful once we turn off the t.v. and start to define ourselves through our own eyes!
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Posted by: DaBear on Nov 20, 2009 12:50 AM
Current rating: Not yet rated [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The trailers alone had us both... thanks for putting this little review on Alternet. We're sold.
The part that grabbed me in this piece was when Patton said, “I didn’t know an audience like that could embrace an all-black film and give it the love that they gave it, and it just blew me away, ” she says. “It was very healing for me as a black woman in America.”
All I can say, is, jeebus, fuck, expand yer circle woman... you got allies in a whole messa white folk. Nobody gets to pick their melanin richness or deficiency. A whole lotta people know it and fully believe there's just no goddammned good in making up bullshit about which is better/not-so or first/second class or dominant/minority and shit based on that melanin level in a body or a buncha bodies. Stories are stories and time is surely coming when a quality "all-black" film will do just as well as a quality all-white film... it just takes time for the dipshits and fuckheads among us to die-off, you know?
We got your back, Ms. Patton. Damn, I can't wait to see this film. Course, I'm gonna need more'n' one handkerchief...
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Posted by: dewre on Nov 24, 2009 9:00 AM
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Blu ray ripper *Blu Ray Ripper for Mac
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