Honeydripper Movie Review
Honeydripper Review
"Honeydripper" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : John SaylesProducer : Maggie Renzi
Screenwiter : John Sayles
Starring Danny Glover, Charles S Dutton, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Mary Steenburgen, Stacy Keach, Vondie Curtis Hall, Sean Patrick Thomas, Keb' Mo', Kel Mitchell, Dr. Mable John, Eddie Shaw, Arthur Lee Williams, Yaya Dacosta, Gary Clarke Jr.
Somewhere right about the time that blues great Keb' Mo' shows up as a blind
guitarist named Possum who loves nothing more than to pick at his instrument
and dispense homespun wisdom with a wry chuckle, it becomes clear that
Honeydripper is not going to be anything close to the film that it should be.
For sure, it would be near impossible, and probably not even advisable, for a
filmmaker to totally eschew cliché when placing a film in as weighted a setting
as John Sayles has done here. A small town in Alabama named Harmony, circa
1950, with a mean white sheriff, a lot of dirt-poor black folk, a bucolic
landscape of thick green forests and insect-buzzed cotton fields, and plenty of
porches to watch life go by from -- the blues is in the air. It's all the
characters can do not to burst into choreographed song and dance.
As usual with Sayles, there's a hard knot of a good story here. The film is
named for the town's Honeydripper Lounge, a ramshackle affair that serves up a
good fried chicken affair but whose old blues singer can't compete with the
jukebox R&B getting blasted by the competition down the street. Danny Glover
plays the owner, Pine Top Purvis, a piano player with a violent past who's in
debt to everyone in town and about out of chances. His last one is a New
Orleans hot shot named Guitar Sam who's got a radio hit and is booked to play
the Honeydripper on Saturday; only problem is, when the train shows up, Guitar
Sam is nowhere to be found, even though Purvis has plastered the town with ads.
The whole thing is a scramble, with Purvis frantically (well, not frantically,
maybe busily; it is the old South, after all, and things take time) working
every last hustle he can to stay ahead of the creditors and the corrupt sheriff
(Stacy Keach, playing it more for laid-back humor than menace) who will shut
him down if he can't find somebody who looks and plays like Guitar Sam to show
up on Saturday. Maybe that handsome fella who just hopped off the train and is
chatting up Purvis' daughter could do the trick…
As is also unfortunately usual with Sayles, the solid structure of his story is
one that plays much better on paper than it does on screen, endlessly padded
out by digressions and dramatic dead-ends. A good example is the subplot
following Purvis' wife Delilah, who is a maid for a rich white family and going
through some sort of religious reawakening at an itinerant preacher's tent
revival. There's nothing wrong on the surface with this story, as Lisa Gay
Hamilton acts it with her expected dignity and grace, and the scenes are warmly
rendered. But the whole thing is just one more element that detracts from the
main thrust of Purvis' desperate predicament. The same goes for another endless
thread following a number of bickering cotton pickers whose relationship to the
entire story is tangential at best. Given how much vibrant humor and energy
Sayles gets out of Glover and Charles S. Dutton, as Purvis' friend, it's
eminently frustrating each time the film wanders away from that setup to dawdle
in the weeds.
One wants to applaud Sayles for trying to present a portrait of an entire town
and period here, but so much of Honeydripper is lacking in punch or drive that
it's hard not to let one's initial admiration drain away and just start waiting
for the thing to end. In any case, there's just no excuse for that blind guitar
player, none whatsoever.
Robert Plant called. He wants his name back.
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Review by Chris Barsanti
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