The Rad Revival House
On this dual Juneteenth/Father’s Day Weekend, the Rad Revival House pays tribute to both yearly observances with our review of the great 1970s African-American family drama, CLAUDINE! Returning to provide his excellent cinematic insight is filmmaker and frequent Special Guest Lecturer Mike Dennis of Reelblack. CLAUDINE stars legendary film stars Diahann Carroll and James Earl Jones, in a performance of a lifetime. Carroll is the titular character, a working-class African-American mother in Harlem working to provide a suitable life for her large family of six kids. In walks Roop (Jones), a smooth-talking garbage collector who sweeps Diahann off her feet. Together, Claudine and Roop’s initial relationship blossoms into love, much to the unease of her six children, including older siblings Charles (Laurence Hilton-Jacobs) and Charlene (Tamu Blackwell), who are particularly defensive at the idea of their mother bringing home another possible male dead-beat in their lives. Despite their problems, both Claudine and Roop work to overcome the challenges of their difficult world. Both Mike and our host, Professor Cesare Augusto discuss the simple, yet incredible finer things of this week’s film showcase. The film’s performances are believable, realistic, and entertaining at the same time, especially by Carroll, the always excellent Jones, and the intense Hilton-Jacobs and Blackwell. Plus, our reviewers wholly enjoyed the film as a black feature serving as a departure from the era’s ultra-popular Blaxpoitation movement. CLAUDINE is a quieter, simple romantic-comedy, proof that black films at the time could be successful and creatively effective, without the standard Blaxploitation cliches!
106 episodios
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