The Boston Phoenix
Review from issue: September 17 - 24, 1998

[Boston Film Festival]

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Down in the Delta

Poet Maya Angelou makes her feature directorial debut with this uplifting but flawed saga about the preservation of family. The film stars a wildly expressive Alfre Woodard as Loretta, a young, jobless mother whose rock-bottom self-esteem marks her an easy target for the temptations of her poor Chicago 'hood. Her high-minded mama (Mary Alice), however, won't brook it, so she ships Loretta and her kin to Biloxi to spend a Mississippi summer with rumble-throated Uncle Earl (Al Freeman Jr.) and his Alzheimer's-stricken wife (Esther Rolle).

Loretta's awkward adjustment amid the willows and white clapboards is wholly predictable, yet first-time screenwriter Myron Goble plies an affecting twist or two, most notably the haunting lore behind a family heirloom, a candelabra named Nathan. Still, the film serves up many clunky moments, in part the result of to Angelou's green camerawork (she previously directed plays and documentaries) and the story's earnest attempt to cram in too many issues -- addiction, guns, job reform, class frictions. Such leaden exposition doesn't sink the story, though; as in Angelou's verse, the themes of heritage and humanity resound. Screens at the Copley Place Saturday, September 19 at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. and Sunday, September 20 at 12:30, 3:15, and 5:30 p.m. Star Alfre Woodard will appear to introduce Saturday's 7:30 showing.

-- Alicia Potter


Film Festival Feature Films

| The Witman Boys | The Cruise | Confessions of a Sexist Pig | Melting Pot | Pleasantville | Clay Pigeons | Waking Ned Devine | Blood, Guts, Bullets, & Octane | My Name is Joe | Six Ways to Sunday | The Theory of Flight | A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries | Down in the Delta | Children of Heaven | I Married a Strange Person | 20 Dates | Bandits |


More Boston Film Festival information, film descriptions, and show times



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