Mississippi Damned
Mississippi Damned | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Tina Mabry |
Produced by |
Lee V. Stiff Morgan R. Stiff |
Screenplay by | Tina Mabry |
Starring |
Adam Clark Malcolm Goodwin Michael Hyatt |
Music by | Ryan Adison Amen |
Cinematography | Bradford Young |
Edited by | Morgan R. Stiff |
Production company |
Morgan's Mark |
Release dates |
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Running time | 120 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Mississippi Damned is a 2009 American drama film directed by Tina Mabry. The drama features Tessa Thompson, DB Woodside, Malcolm Goodwin, Malcolm David Kelley and Michael Hyatt. The film was written and directed by Tina Mabry, based on her life growing up in Tupelo, Mississippi.[1][2]
Plot
Wanting to escape was the easy part. Taking place in 1986 and 1998 and based on a true story, three poor, Black kids in rural Mississippi reap the consequences of their family’s cycle of abuse, addiction, and violence. They independently struggle to escape their circumstances and must decide whether to confront what’s plagued their family for generations or succumb to the same crippling fate, forever damned in Mississippi. Bitterly honest and profoundly subtle, writer/director Tina Mabry successfully captures growing up in a world where possibilities and opportunities seem to die in the face of the suffocating reality of physical and sexual abuse, obsession, and a myriad of destructive compulsions.
In 1986 teenage cousins Leigh and Sammy, and Leigh's younger sister Kari, watch as their mothers and aunts struggle to maintain a roof over their heads. Leigh, a closeted lesbian, is devastated when her girlfriend announces she is marrying a man. Leigh attacks him and is arrested and kicked out of her parents' house. Sammy, a talented basketball player, is sexually abused by an older man, and paid for sexual acts in order to get the money he needs to support his burgeoning basketball career. After Sammy's mother stabs her boyfriend's lover and is arrested, Sammy is taken in by his aunt. He rapes his younger cousin Kari, Leigh's sister.
By 1998 the children are adults. Leigh is still hung up on her old girlfriend and continues to visit her. Sammy, a former professional basketball player, is out of work due to an injury. His pride and previous fame make him reluctant to take the minimum wage job he needs to support his wife and child. Kari, a talented pianist who has delayed college for years to take care of her cancer-stricken mother, is waiting to hear if she has been accepted by a musical conservatory. As she struggles to save money for school, she feels bound by family and friends, most of whom have no money to lend her or are financially dependent on her. She eventually turns to Sammy for money. Although he gives it to her, she is disgusted and ashamed for having asked him.
Sammy, feeling impotent, begins to seduce his son's underage teenage babysitter. When he is caught by his wife, she contacts the police. He commits suicide.
Kari eventually learns that her mother's cancer has returned and her father has been laid off work. She gives her parents Sammy's money and decides not to go to school. When she tells her aunt of her decision, her aunt urges her to go, warning her that if she does not leave now she is unlikely to ever go. Kari learns that she has been accepted to school in New York. Shortly after, she discovers that her aunt has committed suicide, leaving her $25,000 for school. Kari packs up her things and leaves Mississippi, heading toward school.
Cast
- Tonea Stewart as Alice
- Adam Clark as Junior Peterson
- Michael Hyatt as Delores Peterson
- Chasity Kershal Hammitte as Leigh Peterson
- Kylee Russell as Young Kari Peterson
- Tessa Thompson as Kari Peterson
- Jossie Thacker as Charlie Stone
- Malcolm David Kelley as Young Sammy
- Malcolm Goodwin as Sammy Stone
- Cynthia Addai-Robinson as Milena Stone
- Simbi Khali as Anna Tensely
- D.B. Woodside as Tyrone Tensely
- Michael Beasley as James
- Donna Biscoe as Gloria
- Southey Blanton as Irv
- Benjamin Brown as Ray
Reception
Critical response
When the film was screened at the NewFest film festival in New York City, Variety film critic Ronnie Scheib, praised the film, writing, "For the black men, women and children in Mississippi Damned, Tina Mabry's autobiographical saga of intertwined destinies, that southern state epitomizes a domestic hell of borderline poverty and endemic abuse. Complex family trees sometimes make for tough narrative sledding, but the thicket of obligations, traumas and betrayals that entrap the 'damned' here are well worth any momentary confusion. Mabry brilliantly captures a community as organic as it is dead-end, and the tortured legacy behind simplistic notions of ever escaping it. The NewFest audience award-winner demands strong critical support to overcome its downbeat subject matter and lack of a star draw."[3]
The Philadelphia Inquirer film critic, Steven Rea, lauded the actors, writing, "Kelley (Walt Lloyd in Lost), Jasmin Burke and Jossie Thacker are among the busy ensemble whose exceptionally fine performances elevate what could have been a pile-it-on melodrama into something deeper and more unsettling."[4]
Accolades
Wins
- American Black Film Festival: Grand Jury Prize, Best Actor, Tessa Thompson; Best Narrative Feature; 2009.
- Atlanta Film Festival: Special Jury Award, Narrative Breakthrough; 2009.
- Black Reel Awards: Black Reel, Outstanding Independent Feature, Tina Mabry; 2009.
- Chicago International Film Festival: Gold Hugo, Best Film; Gold Plaque, Best Screenplay, Tina Mabry; Best Supporting Actress, Jossie Thacker; 2009.
- New York Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, & Transgender Film Festival: Audience Award, Narrative Feature; 2009.
- Outfest: Grand Jury Award, Outstanding US Dramatic Feature; 2009.
- Philadelphia Film Festival: Jury Award, Best American Independent Film; 2009.
Distribution
Despite a successful festival run, the film was unable to find distribution. The producer distributed it into a few theatres. In 2011 it premiered on Showtime and in 2015 it was made available through Netflix via distributor ARRAY.[5]
References
- ↑ Mississippi Damned at the Internet Movie Database.
- ↑ Staton, John. StarNews On-Line, "There are some 'Damned' fine filmmakers at Cucalorus," November 13, 2009. Last accessed: February 23, 2011.
- ↑ Variety film review, June 23, 2009. Last accessed: February 23, 2011.
- ↑ Rea, Steven. The Philadelphia Inquirer, film review, April 01, 2009. Accessed: August 1, 2013.
- ↑ Obenson, Tambay A. "Tina Mabry's 'Mississippi Damned' Is Now Streaming on Netflix, Courtesy of AFFRM + Array". Retrieved 13 November 2015.
External links
- Mississippi Damned at the Internet Movie Database
- Mississippi Damned film trailer on YouTube
- Tina Mabry interview at StarNews On-Line
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