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By Susan Granger - Ever since this grim, gritty, urban drama won kudos at the Sundance, Cannes and Toronto Film Festivals and the endorsement of Oprah Winfrey and Tyler Perry, it’s been generating industry hype and Oscar buzz, building on its themes of prejudice, incest, poverty and AIDS.

Poor, illiterate, morbidly obese, African-American 16 year-old Claireece ‘Precious’ Jones (Gabourey Sidibe) has been raped by her father since she was a toddler, already bearing one Downs Syndrome child, named Morgan, and pregnant by him again - in 1987 - when she’s assigned to an alternative school, Each One/Teach One, where an altruistic, compassionate literacy workshop teacher, Ms. Blu Rain (Paula Patton), encourages her to keep a journal. Expressing her bleak despair and traumatic rage in poetry and prose allows angry, alienated, HIV-positive Precious to blossom with her first shred of self-esteem and a new sense of self-respect and self-determination. This infuriates the teenager’s jealous, foul-mouthed, welfare-cheating mother, Mary (Mo’Nique), a warped, sadistic predator who habitually abuses Precious - emotionally and physically - from her perch in front of the television set their filthy Harlem apartment.


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While 26 year-old newcomer Gabourey “Gabby” Sidibe is riveting - and she’s the voice-over narrator - upcoming Academy Award nominations will undoubtedly, and deservedly, also include stand-up comedienne Mo’Nique. There’s also a surprisingly deglamorized Mariah Carey as drab Mrs. Weiss, the patient social worker who finally has to intervene between Precious and her monstrous, self-absorbed mother, and Lenny Kravitz, who is nearly unrecognizable in a small role as a nurse. Screenwriter Geoffrey Fletcher and director Lee Daniels (“Shadowboxer,” “Monster’s Ball,” “The Woodsman”) are slavishly faithful to the socially-conscious 1996 novel by Sapphire (a.k.a. teacher/poet Romona Lofton), shooting reality with an almost-documentary sensibility while interspersing light-hearted sequences of sheer fantasy on a $10 million budget.

On the Granger Movie Gauge of 1 to 10, “Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire” is a shocking, street-smart 9, primarily for its memorably brazen and devastating performances.

© 2009 Susan Granger - “Precious: Based on the Novel ‘Push’ by Sapphire” (Lionsgate)




© 2010 Arizona Reporter (reproduction prohibited)
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Entertainment

LOS ANGELES, Calif. - Filmmaker, Scott McCullough (The Exorcism Diaries, Prince Unauthorized) is working on a script in association with U.S. based Producers, Silver Lining Pictures, according to the filmmaker and industry sources. "Born by the River-The Story of Sam Cooke" is the story of a man affectionately referred to as "The King of Soul" and one of the fore founders of soul music. Known for his unique voice, meaningful lyrics and wide influence of today's world of music. Cooke, authored songs such as "You Send Me", "A Change Is Gonna Come", "Chain Gang" and "Wonderful World" among his most influential hits. The former gospel artist turned pop-icon died after being shot in a Los Angeles motel in 1964.
I like two types of films, action and westerns, both with guns, balls and beautiful women. Bullets and blood are exactly how Sly closed out his infamous Rambo franchise and as a director he has learned a vital ingredient in filmmaking-to surround oneself with the finest in the trade that can compliment the grittiness and violence his more recent films are known for.

Quantum Leap Thinking

How many wonderful ideas have never been put out in world because their creator was afraid of appearing foolish? How many people have stifled their creativity because of fear? How many of you have never allowed your creative vision to become reality for fear of asking for help or creating a partnership? Far too many, I'm afraid.
More Quantum Thinking

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Around Arizona

WINSLOW, Ariz. - Jackson Browne may have made bundles of cash on his hit song, "Take It Easy" and his famous lyrics, "Standin' On A Corner In Winslow, Arizona"; as for life in this small town there's a dedicated few who made a few things possible, in order to bring life back to this once booming 'Route 66' town.
Many people have been following developments regarding the petition submitted Aug. 3 to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by the Center for Biological Diversity, American Bird Conservancy and three other groups, seeking a national ban on lead ammunition and fishing tackle. The following is an update.

Arizona Guide

With dove season being open (Sept. 1), it's a good time for a cast-n-blast trip, especially along the lower Colorado River.

Yuma has the prime dove hunting with all of its agricultural fields. During the past two weeks, however, I witnessed lots of doves all along the Colorado River from the Topock Gorge to Yuma (and also lots of fat quail for October fin and feather trips).

Arizona Events

2nd Annual Spanish and Flamenco Festival in historic downtown Tucson. This is a unique opportunity to experience flamenco and Spanish culture in a traditional late-night, outdoor festival atmosphere. Traditional Spanish tapas will be served along with Casa Vicente's extensive dinner menu.



Susan Granger Reviews


Usually, when the only critics screening of a star-driven spy thriller is just two days before opening, it's an indication that there's a problem. And there is. This is not an action movie, and it's certainly not a conventional thriller. Not that it isn't intriguing. It is - if you're into meditative, minimalist, non-commercial, European-style filmmaking.

Harvey Critic


It's chic for a movie critic to say that "the book is better," but in this case-considering that the story is a slow-moving psychological suspense thriller-Martin Booth's 1990 novel is the way to go. As you turn the pages you will doubtless wonder what comes next, the type of tale that intrigues on the page but comes across inert on the big screen. As directed by Anton Corbijn, "The American" is spare of dialogue (script by Rowan Joffe and the novelist), the music by Herbert Grönemeyer either non-existent or anything but intrusive, with a landscape in Italy's Abruzzo region that's, what should we say, European? The medieval town built on a hill, scene of most of the action, would be nice to drive through but would hardly entice tourists to stay overnight. This is the sort of place, however, that a fellow in the service of assassins might want to live, a form of redemption that he would not likely find in his home country but rather as an expatriate living the quiet life away from what novelist Martin Booth calls "the shadow-dwellers."

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