Monday, December 28, 2020

Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (Netflix, 2020)

Set in Chicago in the 1920s, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom allows the audience to eavesdrop on a group of African American musicians as they prepare to record a song that will make a lot of money for some white people. 

We hang out in the basement and meet the band -- Cutler, Toledo, Levee, and Slow Drag -- as they talk about their past experiences and their dreams of the future. We watch Ma Rainey use the only power she has -- withholding her singing voice -- to bully her white managers until she get what she wants. And we watch those managers do her bidding, no matter how much she frustrates them, because they know a little frustration now will lead to a big payday for them later. 

Even though this movie is set in the 1920s and is based on a play written by August Wilson more than 35 years ago, the themes explored strongly resonate today. Despite a growing diversity in our society, whites today hold power and the privilege that comes with it. If black people have some power to wield, it's because whites recognized that it benefited whites and allowed it to happen. 

Temporarily. 

The audience witness the characters in Black Bottom recognize that truth, and sympathize with each as he or she struggles to deal with it. 

Viola Davis is wonderful in the supporting role of Ma Rainey. Ma's hard to like -- she's a bully, and she comes off as selfish and arrogant. But Davis pulls back the curtain to let the audience in on how and why she behaves that way, which makes her relatable to the viewer. The star of the film is Chadwick Boseman. His turn as Levee is his final performance before dying from colon cancer in August, 2020. 

This role may well have been his finest. 

Levee is ambitious but filled with rage about how he's treated in a white majority society. He has a right to be: he's lived a hard 32 years of second class citizenry, and he's seen more than his share of race-based violence and tragedy. Unlike Ma, who makes a lot of money for white men in the recording business, Levee has no power. The rage he feels about his lack of standing grows until it explodes in the next-to-last scene of the movie.

Black Bottom explores the desire for equality and opportunity in our American society. Ma weaponizes it so that she doesn't lose it. Others keep their heads down and adopt an attitude of "that's just the way it is," so that they can earn a living. Some act out against that reality, and suffer tragedy as a result.

Ma Rainey's Black Bottom is a well crafted, well acted drama that will get some Oscar buzz whenever the post-pandemic Oscar buzz happens. And the buzz will be well deserved. 





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