Freedom Song Movie Review
Freedom Song Review
"Freedom Song" Overview

Rating: NR
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Phil Alden RobinsonProducer : Amanda DiGiulio
Screenwiter : Phil Alden Robinson,Stanley Weiser
Starring Danny Glover, Vicellous Shannon, Vondie Curtis-hall, Loretta Devine, Glynn Turman, Stan Shaw, Michael Jai White, John Beasley, Jason Weaver, Rae'ven Kelly, Marcello Thedford, David Strathairn
Long and annoying have been the boasts of TNT of its status as “the best movie
studio on television.” With that celebrity narrator whose voice you know by
heart and whose name always escapes you, TNT’s advertisements for its latest
western directed by Bill Pullman, or, in this case, Gandhi-rip off starring
Danny Glover pop up right in the middle of the TV edit for an old movie that
you could probably go without seeing and normally cause people like me to
switch to the upper-channel echelon of HBO, Cinemax, Showtime, and The Movie
Channel… where I don’t have to bother about hearing from some moron boasting
that their station produces really good “made-for-TV” movies as if this was
something to be proud about.
Having finally caved in and sampled TNT, having sampled HBO on a fairly regular
basis, I can now say without a doubt that not only is TNT not the best movie
studio on television… it is by far one of the worst. With large payments
towards directors who do not demonstrate fair ability, TNT seems to reward the
kind of schlock-TV that has made “TV-movie” into a status symbol in the film
industry.
A case in point is Freedom Song, yet another “based on a true story” TV-movie
that is slightly above the limbo bar set by Lifetime. With shaky camerawork, a
simplistic script, a simpler purpose and characters that seem to be cut out of
the pantheon on the civil-rights movement clichés (the outsider, the old
soldier who gave up, the subversive who has been fighting in his own way his
entire life, and, of course, the narrator with a conflict that he has to get
over), Freedom Song just is another example of why TV movies are only examples
of what couldn’t make the cut of the silver screen.
Freedom Song deals with the civil rights movement in the really deep south of
Mississippi where Owen Walker (Vicellous Reon Shannon) is still sore over being
spanked by his father because he accidentally walked into the Whites Only
waiting room at the train station. His father didn’t want to spank him, but
was forced to by whites, and because of this his father has lost his own spirit
for fighting for The Movement, only to watch his son grow into the person who
eventually desegregates the Whites Only washroom (by staging a march on City
Hall and getting the Freedom Riders to desegregate the place).
It’s a plot so kitschy I have to remind myself that it actually happened.
Now I am of the generation (and race) that never had to deal with the Jim Crow
laws, but this should not stop me from saying what needs to be said about
“Freedom Song:” that it is a gimmicky movie-of-the-week quality made-for-TV
movie that should have never been aired, let alone released on video. I’ve
read the history books, I’ve watched Gandhi, Malcolm X, and Glory... all of
them more than once… do I really have to see yet another flimsy excuse at
filmmaking when I could just read the books (history ones, that is), and get at
least as good of an idea at Freedom Song offers, or watch some incredible films
dealing with racism, and get a better idea of the message behind Freedom Song?
Please. No more games, no more gimmicks, and, above all, no more claims that
TNT is the best movie studio on television because, with films like Freedom
Song, you can rest assured that it is not.
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Review by James Brundage
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