“She’s got the Oscar.” I called my roommate–who had already seen Dreamgirls–after I got out of the theatre. I was, of course, referring to Jennifer Hudson, whose performance tears a gaping hole through the screen. It’s hard to imagine her classified as a supporting actress–she steals every scene of which she is a part, even against a formidable team of Oscar winners and superstars–but I do feel pretty positive that she’ll be taking the gold on February 25. Dreamgirls is the story of The Dreams, a Supremes-inspired group that comes to fame in 1960s Detroit. Hudson plays Effie White, the lead singer of the group in its formative days. Big-boned and brash, she has an attitude almost as large as her incredible voice. The group tries out at a black amateur night; they are bested by a B.B. King-esque blues guitarist, but are spotted by Curtis Taylor Jr. (Jamie Foxx), a car salesman-cum-aspiring manager who sees potential for stardom in them and, more importantly, potential for money in his pocket. He also has his eye on Effie, whose steely eyes and raised chin only serve to turn him on. The two other girls in the group are Lorrell (Anika Noni Rose, doing an admirable job of squeezing the laughs from a hugely-overshadowed role) and Deena, played by BeyoncĂ© Knowles in an ingenious, and eerily true-to-life, casting choice. As the group becomes popular backing the singer James “Thunder” Early (Eddie Murphy), frustration mounts within both of the new lovers, Effie and Curtis: Effie, who only signed on as a backup singer at the behest of the other girls, is tired of being in the shadows, and Curtis is not satisfied with his modest success–he wants to make STARS, artists famous not just in the black community, but worldwide. The movie jumps into high gear when the decision is made to sever ties between the Dreamettes and Thunder, creating the new Dreams, a group aiming for the pop stratosphere. Unfortunately for Effie, the decision is also made to replace her with Deena, whose inhumanly attractive face and figure and bland, malleable voice, are exactly what Curtis thinks will push them over the top. Effie loses it, as anyone who is clearly superior to her replacement would be, but is convinced to stay in the group for the sake of the group–the scene unfortunately contains one of the cheesiest ballads in the score, “We Are Family”–and things move along in the uneventful way that promises an explosion on the horizon. That explosion comes as Effie realizes that Curtis has not only replaced her with Deena, but has also fallen in love with her. As Effie becomes more volatile and uncooperative, Curtis decides to replace her. When she finds out, the ensuing scene–a tense 10-minute climax to the film–culminates in Effie’s earth-shattering “And I Am Telling You I’m Not Going,” a desperate, guttural cry from a woman who realizes she has just lost everything. It leaves the hairs on your neck standing, a chilling performance that is instantly inscribed into movie history. The second act of the movie is less successfully, in no small part due to the lessened presence of Effie, who raises her new daughter as she collects welfare, struggling to make ends meet. On the opposite end of the spectrum, Deena becomes the superstar Deena Jones, an entity who overshadows her group and becomes the target of ravenous fandom (sound familiar?). Tensions rise between her and Curtis as realizes the man in control of her life and her heart is not the same suave character she married. Curtis has become a tyrant, drunk on success; Foxx plays him well, his brow permanently furrowed and his mouth morphed into a scowl. As she loses control of her life and image, Deena finally becomes an interesting character; when she sings “Listen” in the studio, her gaze fixed intensely on Curtis, you finally feel for BeyoncĂ©. It’s not “I’m Not Going,” but Miss Knowles shows that she, too, is a force to be reckoned with. There is a happy ending; this is a Hollywood production, after all. Everything wraps up nicely without it feeling forced, not a trivial feat for a movie like this. I won’t give away the concluding scenes, but it’s not shocking news that Effie finally gets her due. This is the only movie I’ve ever seen where people waited at the end of the movie to cheer at an actress’ name in the credits. I think that says it all. In a great Hollywood movie with a great cast (I didn’t even go into Murphy, who should be a lock for a Supporting Actor nomination), Hudson stands head and shoulders above them all. – Rather than posting the trailer, which you can easily find, I’ll post a clip of Jennifer Hudson singing “I Am Changing” from the Today show. It’s not perfect–she’s a little hoarse and her timing is a little off–but realize that it’s 8 o’clock in the morning and she has, according to Matt Lauer, been screaming her head off because she just found out she was nominated for a Golden Globe. filed under: misc and movies | comments: 2 comments |
(from THE 6th ANNUAL YEAR IN IDEAS, New York Times Magazine) Empty-Stomach Intelligence Hunger makes the best sauce, goes the maxim. According to researchers at Yale Medical School, it may make quadratic equations and Kant’s categorical imperative go down easier too. The stimulation of hunger, the researchers announced in the March issue of Nature Neuroscience, causes mice to take in information more quickly, and to retain it better — basically, it makes them smarter. And that’s very likely to be true for humans as well. A team led by Tamas Horvath, chairman of Yale’s comparative medicine program, had been analyzing the pathways followed in mouse brains by ghrelin, a hormone produced by the stomach lining, when the stomach is empty. To the scientists’ surprise, they found that ghrelin was binding to cells not just in the primitive part of the brain that registers hunger (the hypothalamus) but also in the region that plays a role in learning, memory and spatial analysis (the hippocampus). The researchers then put mice injected with ghrelin and control mice through a maze and other intelligence tests. In each case, the biochemically ‘’hungry'’ mice — mice infused with ghrelin — performed notably better than those with normal levels of the hormone. The finding was startling, but ‘’it makes sense,'’ Horvath says. ‘’When you are hungry, you need to focus your entire system on finding food in the environment.'’ In fact, some biologists believe that human intelligence itself evolved because it made early hominids more effective hunters, gathers and foragers. Horvath says we can use the hormonal discoveries to our cognitive advantage. Facing the LSAT, a final exam or a half-day job interview? Go in mildly hungry, not carbo-loaded for endurance, and snack to maintain that edgy state. Such advice, applied on a national scale, might help save our schools. Since overweight kids have suppressed ghrelin levels, Horvath theorizes that perhaps the obesity epidemic has contributed to declining test scores and other American educational woes. filed under: misc | comments: none |
I have been out of commission because I’m in the middle of an ass-kicking from finals. It’s OK, though, because I am TIME’s Person of the Year! It’s such an honor; I don’t know what to say. How do I really feel? I feel that “You” is such a cop-out. Doesn’t it seem like they just got lazy, or that no single person stood out? How about Tara Conner and Katie Blair for proving that girls have better role models than Paris and Nicole? Britney Spears’ nether regions for being photographed more than Shiloh and Suri combined–with less hair, to boot? Mark Zuckerberg for giving the finger to Yahoo? Meredith Viera for proving that she can charm any audience? Katie Couric for proving that she can’t? Or, my annual favorite, the creator of all humanity, Oprah? filed under: misc | comments: 3 comments |
filed under: misc | comments: 2 comments |
Who told me it would be a good idea to join a Greek letter society? And why is it my favorite thing to do? Not only did I get initiated, I’m the secretary next semester. I guess everyone just wants to be liked. I had my whole life to be nerdy and unpopular; it’s a paranoid psychosis that will never subside, I think. My life is so different than I expected. But I feel that it’s different in beautiful and expansive ways. I can do anything now. I wish I didn’t have to work at clubs to pay off my bills, but it’s a temporary setback. I’m glad I took the steps–and if you think about it, applying to Columbia abruptly is as drastic a step as moving to New York abruptly–to paint a bigger picture for my life and get out of that retail/club cycle. filed under: misc | comments: 3 comments |
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