A Beautiful Soul (FILM REVIEW)
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A Beautiful Soul
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Shades of 'It's a Wonderful
Life' Abound in Faith-Based Morality Play
It’s a Wonderful Life (1946) is a much-beloved
fable about a depressed businessman who decides not to commit suicide after an
angel intervenes and shows him how much worse off the world would be without
him. Shades of that Frank Capra classic abound in A Beautiful Soul, a
faith-based variation on the theme, but in blackface.
Directed by Jeffrey W. Byrd (King’s
Ransom), this music-driven, hip-hop opera stars Dietrick Haddon as Andre “Dre”
Stephens, a booty and bling-obsessed pop icon who has turned his back on the
Lord. We witness his misbehavior firsthand when the shallow singing sensation only
goes to church grudgingly, and then proceeds to insult the deacon (Jeris
Poindexter) by trying to pick up female parishioners and by failing to encourage
a promising young soloist (Trevor Jackson) in the choir.
Such repugnant behavior invariably
forecasts doom in your typical, transparent morality play that tends to telegraphs
its punches. And in this case, the day of reckoning arrives when Dre is shot
during an ambush of his entourage staged by a disgruntled bodyguard (Vincent
Ward).
With his mortally-wounded best
friend (Robert Ri’chard) slowly expiring, Dre is lucky to be left floating in a
limbo somewhere between Heaven and Earth. While in that suspended state, the
sinner’s technologically-advance Guardian Angel (Vanessa Bell Calloway) appears
and helps him, via iPad, see the error of his ways.
Dre
simultaneously spends four months in a coma in the care of Angela (Lesley-Ann
Brandt), a gorgeous groupie-turned-nurse-turned-soon to be-love interest. By
the time he’s rehabilitated and fully revived, the world is waiting with baited
breath to see whether their favorite bad boy will be Born Again or remain a
materialistic misogynist.
An inner-city tale of redemption
which proves that miracles don’t only happen to orphans in the Midwest at Christmastime!
Very Good
(3 stars)
Rated PG-13 for
violence and sensuality.
Running time: 90 minutes
Distributor: Tyscot/Manhaddon
Films and Mission Pictures International
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