Score: 5 / 5
Any August Wilson production is more than worth its ticket cost. While the latest film adaptation premiered on Netflix instead of cinemas, it deserves a lot more viewing -- and uninterrupted, distraction-less viewing -- than I fear it will ultimately get. Apart from its glorious adaptation to film, helmed by the great stage director George C. Wolfe, it features two of the best performances on screen in 2020. The first is by the always brilliant Viola Davis, who is utterly transformed into the titular blues-singing diva, complete with feathers, beads, battle-ready makeup, and shining gold teeth. The second is by the late Chadwick Boseman, and it is, in this viewer's mind, the best performance he's given. We will never know if he knew this would be his swan song, but his powerhouse performance is a devastating and brutal reminder that he was taken far too soon.
It's a hot summer day in 1927, but the jazzy blues are hotter in one Chicago recording studio. Famed Ma Rainey, recently contracted by white producers and a white manager, is late for her session, although her band was punctual. As they try to rehearse, they are interrupted by their trumpeter, egotistical and ambitious Levee Green, who scoffs at their practicing and prefers to chitchat, hobnob, and dillydally his way to the performance, puffing himself up in front of the older band members by describing the new tunes he's written and gotten the producers to listen to. Levee wants to break away and make his own record; the band is happy enough to support Ma and be supported in return. You might say, "When you're good to Mama..." but that's another musical.
The band clearly has two divas, but only one is the real deal. Levee, played to revelatory perfection by Chadwick Boseman, aggressively charms even as he passively evades consequence. He knows he's a good horn player, and is old enough to know that is not enough to get where he wants to get. But he's young enough that his charm gets him in trouble, trouble he thinks he can sweet-talk his way through. In fact, his Cheshire grin, though genuine, is as manipulative and seductive as a magician's or even a killer's right before he reveals his trick. It's a dangerous game Levee plays, and Boseman, disguising his burning rage and (perhaps righteous) indignation at his status. He deserves better, and he aims to claim what he deserves. As he is told repeatedly by the other band members, Ma calls the numbers and the style, not Levee. But Levee thinks he has it in with the white manager and producer, so he's going to upset the applecart before launching to the stars.
When Ma finally arrives, she makes demands on the recording that were not agreed to by the band or the producer, and tempers quickly flare. A dazzling Viola Davis (ever an amazing actor, but here transformed almost beyond recognition) is here the openly queer and openly contemptuous icon of greasepaint and blues, dripping with beads, feathers, and furs. Hers is the sort of larger-than-life performance that will stand the test of time, but here it works both because of the heightened reality of this chamber piece and due to honoring the real-life blues singer. As the members come and go on errands, failing to record substantial takes, they soliloquize and philosophize, discussing work, religion, politics, race, and of course their own lives, slowly burning into a somewhat disillusioned but disoriented collective state of mind. But madness itself comes for only one person, and the violent finale comes when Levee's ambition and hopes and fears collide with his choices and his circumstance, forcing him into an impossible position.
A relative lack of plot allows for more time to deal with significant issues, and few writers are better to handle this than August Wilson, whose voice controls every ebb and flow of emotional weight. Though the film features music by Branford Marsalis, Wilson's dialogue is its own chamber piece, scoring itself in long-winded speeches and overlapping dialogue with dynamic rhythms and particular cadences that inform our feeling of the scene as much as the content of the language itself. Wilson's tendency for weaving metaphysical language and even fantastic or supernatural elements into his dialogue is most present here in Cutler (Colman Domingo), whose religious background informs several themes that pointedly inform the eventual climax. In fact, all the roles here have juicy moments, and the actors are altogether brilliant in fulfilling the needs of a demanding script and what was no doubt a demanding shoot.
Director George C. Wolfe, famed Broadway director, here delivers his best film yet; staged as it is, I would almost have preferred it to be actually shot on stage, if only to see what he would have done with it. Being locked in unbroken scenes with these actors in these roles would have felt intoxicating in their nightmarish design. And yet he surprises us with genius visual tricks, shifting our gaze to unexpected and often apparently insignificant elements that don't quite make sense if you're familiar with the play, but suddenly make themselves crucial to our understanding of the drama at work. Case in point: before the climax, during another character's revealing discussion, he closes our focus in on Levee, forcing us to watch Boseman's nonverbal facial reactions to his own mental breakdown, tying two separate symbolic stories at the same time as an unspoken theme becomes all too literal. And then, as Boseman goes in for his climax, Wolfe has the amazing good sense to just let him be, in what is unquestionably the best single scene on film this year. Boseman's fury is almost unwatchable, partly because the man knew he was dying as he filmed the iconic Wilson scene about mortality, legacy, and the pain of life. The illusion is so perfect that it is hard to even call it that; the reality of the art presented to us is, in fact, reality. It's a transcendent moment unlike any I've seen in years. Much will be made of him, and Davis, and not enough will be made of the excellence that is Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, but Boseman is, truly, the best actor in any dramatic performance this year.