Showing posts with label Mo'nique. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mo'nique. Show all posts

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Precious: Flawless gem

Precious (2009) • View trailer for Precious
Five stars (out of five). Rating: R, for rape, child abuse, drug use, dramatic intensity and relentless profanity
By Derrick Bang • Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 12.3.09
Buy DVD: Precious • Buy Blu-Ray: Precious: Based on the Novel "Push" by Sapphire [Blu-ray]

Some dramas are so persuasively powerful that they become more "real" than documentaries.

Director Lee Daniels' mesmerizing handling of Precious is just such a film.

I was so caught up in the story  so thoroughly immersed in Gabourey Sidibe's powerful lead performance  that at one point, late in the film, as Claireece "Precious" Jones gets out of a car in the midst of a brutal Harlem snowfall, I was immediately concerned that she'd better get inside quickly, lest she get cold.
Claireece "Precious" Jones (Gabourey Sidibe, left) sees her mother, Mary
(Mo'Nique), smile only when a social worker visits; the facade crumbles the
moment the interloper leaves the slum apartment, at which point Mary reverts
to her usual level of toxicity. Mo'Nique's performance is a horror story of
poisonous motherhood: a benchmark that stands alongside other memorable
monster parents such as Shelley Winters ("A Patch of Blue") and Angela
Lansbury ("The Manchurian Candidate").

The notion that this was a film  fiction  was long gone. I may as well have been watching this narrative through a window; it was genuinely happening, at that moment.

Although tremendously difficult to watch -— the story is unapologetically frank, and frequently brutal  Precious is a work of art in the truest sense: a film put together with unerring care, blending superlative performances with a storytelling style that both suits its environment, and respects its characters (those who deserve respect, I hasten to add).

Geoffrey Fletcher's gripping script is based on the book Push, a Novel by Sapphire, and it's as harrowing a slice of inner-city despair as ever has been conveyed on film. And yet, despite its bleak environment and frequently disturbing content, it emerges as a most unlikely empowerment saga: proof that the human spirit, no matter how beaten down and degraded, can flicker into unlikely glory if granted encouragement.

And love. Most importantly, love.

After experiencing a story such as this, one is inclined to believe that love is more crucial to human survival than breathing.

Sidibe's presence dominates this film  she's in nearly every scene -— and not simply because of her breathtaking size. She's a huge young woman of 16: tragically overweight thanks to a foul diet and a tendency to overeat as compensation for her miserable life. (You'll not regard fried chicken and McDonald's fast food quite the same way, after this film.)

We're riveted to her misery: an eternal expression of vacant despair that flows from her eyes  which miss nothing  and the grim set of her mouth. I'm grateful to the recent talk-show appearances that have revealed Sidibe to be a vivacious young woman with a ready smile; it's both nice to see her capable of such gaiety, and to be reminded that her work in this film is "only" acting.

But what acting. "Heartache" isn't a strong enough word to describe our reaction to Precious.