Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire (15)

Film

Drama

736.fi.x491.precious.jpg

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5

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<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5
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Time Out says

Tue Jan 26 2010

If there was a gold statuette for wall-to-wall compassion, ‘Precious’ would wipe the floor with its rivals this awards season. Director Lee Daniels and writer Geoffrey Fletcher’s adaptation of Sapphire’s novel ‘Push’ oozes empathy from the first scene to the last. It’s inescapably bleak, but occasionally it has the confidence and spirit to emerge from the shadows of its tragic story – the tale of Precious (Gabourey Sidibe), an obese 16-year-old teenager in 1980s Harlem who is abused by her mother and father – to indulge in sly humour and jolly camaraderie before retreating again into the darkness at its heart.

‘My name’s Clarissa Precious Jones… and I want to be on the cover of a magazine,’ says Sidibe. What she gets is less glitzy: we learn of the gross difference between the refuge of her mind and the reality of her life. When her vile mother (Mo’Nique, grotesque, chilling but in the end almost sympathetic) screams, ‘I should have aborted your motherfuckin’ ass,’ Precious imagines herself walking the red carpet at a film premiere. Perhaps most movingly, when she looks in the mirror, she sees a girl who is more beautiful and more white.

So, a better life is possible, but imagination just isn’t enough: ‘Precious’ is a film about real escape, not dreams. The film celebrates a winning combination of individual strength, education and community over the warped logic of the sort of corrupt household where a loveless grandma puts on a wig and feigns love for a Down’s syndrome child, a piece of theatre to secure a cheque from a visiting social worker. It’s a film that acknowledges poverty and inequality while refusing to believe that people can’t escape from their grip. It’s a truly American movie. Its realism is social – not socialist – and its happy flights of imagination recall the magical side of Danny Boyle more than the grit of Ken Loach.

Slowly, surely, Precious attends a special school with an inspirational teacher (Paula Patton), begins sessions with a social worker (Mariah Carey, unobtrusive) and fights her silent, violent and self-loathing tendencies to make new friends, a colourful bunch of girls in her class, from a mouthy Jamaican immigrant to a tough nut from The Bronx. It’s not an easy battle and Daniels has a tendency to land new blows when you think the fight is over. So oppressive and extreme is Precious’s background that you imagine terrible things are about to happen even when they’re not. I didn’t find the film as actively upsetting as many have reported – merely very, very sad.

The film arrives here after winning prizes at Toronto and Sundance and gaining four Bafta nominations. So, should you believe the hype? Yes and no. ‘Precious’ is very affecting and has some great performances, especially from Sidibe and Mo’Nique, but the film is arguably more heart than art. Is that such a bad thing? Perhaps not: when a film shines a light on a desperate way of life and gives dignity to characters barely ever portrayed on screen, you can forgive some clumsy, emphatic storytelling and a narrative that’s too episodic and reliant on voiceover. It’s a film full of life and love, well-meaning and, judging by the reaction in the US, a genuine and important phenomenon that says act – don’t dwell – on your dreams. A genuine Obama-era movie, then.
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Release details

Rated:

15

UK release:

Fri Jan 29 2010

Duration:

109 mins

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 4/5 (12 ratings)
  • precious is great movie ! i like the way everyfing is set out beautifully done ! the movie gets really touchie but gerat actors they all suit ther role in the movie

    liki Thu Mar 18 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Ok 1st things 1st! Acting is supurcb! Story is good, film however aint! Set in the USA in 1987, this film is very unbelievable! A Parent asking to Marry you, another who beats you? Help! It's not 1700 AD here! Very depressing drama that does disturb but as usual another poor Oscar Nominee! Alright for most parts but boring for some. Deserves a 3 for being a little like Dangerous Minds. Not the orst film!

    Thomas Noctor Sat Feb 20 2010
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • A stunning, shocking, wonderful film. What are you all talking about, you mockers, especially the negative comparison with the saccharin sick-bucket that is 'The Color Purple'? Incredible performances from Maria Carey and the actress who plays the mother. The only weak link, as has been pointed out, is the king, pretty. Miss Honey teacher, who just seems to have wandered into the wrong film. Amazing to see a US film with real-looking black characters, not just light-skinned Halle Berry/Thandie Newton lookalikes.

    Jools Thu Feb 18 2010
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • That's funny but slso true Jerry, nice one!

    Julian Bates Wed Feb 10 2010
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  • This was not enterainment,was thought proking and the last sceen bettween mother daughter and social worker was moving and powerful but left the cinema feeling dirty and needing a shower

    jerry58 Wed Feb 10 2010
    Rated as: 4/5
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  • I came to look at these posts just for curiosity -& realised I shouldn’t have done so when I read the negative reviews. Although I don’t adore this movie –& I was amused at one point (the reference to Fame to do with the teacher), but when she said 'I love you' I was quite moved! I think it depends on how you see it: I don’t think I like false-sentimentality, but that point struck the tender part of the film quite acutely! I think it depends on where you're at in yourself at that time! Also –someone said this is ‘unrealistic’: I find such a comment very naïve and wrong (personally): this is the lives of MANY people I believe: not exactly with this detail, but the lack of options, the deep entrenchment of the family's 'power', the complete self-centredness of some of the characters: unfortunately, some people and some families are VERY like this! I think its psychological portrayal was one of its strengths: it stayed within the understated and the real (The Colour Purple is a completely different film, saying Other things; the comparison is superfluous!). Yes- Carey was very good in her role, & looked much nicer (she normally looks hideously plastic; here she looked real, and more naturally beautiful).

    Julian Bates Tue Feb 9 2010
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • I didn't like this film. I know I was supposed to - who could help but feel sympathy for the horrors heaped upon Precious? Her life is terrible, the acting is acceptable and....that's not enough to make a great movie. I kept thinking that if you want a film which deals with an abused black woman's journey in a world which doesn't value black women - go watch The Color Purple; infinitely better- it's more expansive, the characters develop over the years, and every second of film has been honed into perfection with real artistry. Whoopi also had a lot more range in the central role than Precious does. But...back to Precious, the film of the moment: I found the teacher irritatingly smug and the acting contrived. Indeed the whole role of the teacher as inspirational saviour feels done to death anyway, but her saccharine way of relating to Precious, really sounded the deaht knell. I also felt there was a real lack of depth in terrms of character development; the characters didn't feel rounded - did we really get to know anyone? The girl who played Precious was solid enough in the role, and I could believe that her fairly inexpressive face was realistic; she was a person who had to keep things in due to the abuse she received - but, accurate as that may be, I didn't truly feel I got to know her as much as I would have liked. There were some interesting touches however; when Precious combs her hair in the mirror she sees a slim, white girl, not her obese, black self. In a world where women like Precious are literally nowhere - they are not on our screens, they are not in our magazines, they are not modeling our clothes, it was far and away the most convincing and unpreachy moment. One final point: Mariah Carey; my least favourite celebrity due to that plastic image and the sense that she is a self-absorbed, diva with little grip on reality. I can only hang my head in shame. Words fail me here. She shocked me. She should seriously consider becoming a working actress and put the singing career on hold because she gets it exactly right here. Brilliant, understated acting, without a single false note. She didn't even look like Mariah Carey, she looked like the woman she was supposed to be in the film; you forget it's her because she is that good. I would be extremely interested to see her in her next role. The actress playing the smug saccharine teacher (the "I love you" moment appalled me, being so poorly delivered) could learn a lot from her. Overall quite an average film, but at least a film with a refreshingly different female lead.

    Jade Sun Feb 7 2010
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  • Phil Ince - Thanks for your comment. But, yes, it is the grandmother (of the Downs Syndrome child) who puts the wig on. The older woman is her GREAT-grandmother! Thanks, Dave Calhoun, Film Editor

    Dave Calhoun Fri Feb 5 2010
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  • Trickydicky asked: ‘Am I alone in saying when Miss Rain knelt beside Precious and said, “But I love you, Preciousâ€�, I nearly laughed?’ I don’t think I laughed, brother. I’d seen it in the trailer but had hoped it was a phoney moment whose context might give it meaning. Regrettably, it was every inch as phoney as the trailer made it look. The key thing about that moment is that, ultimately, it's a casual lie. If the teacher says 'I love you, Precious!', what are the consequences of that statement to such a vulnerable girl. It's another element of incredibility in a film that's so full of them. What is this professional woman doing taking a vulnerable girl into her home? Telling the girl she loves her? How long will this love last? What is it good for? What is the consequence of emoting in that way? Isn’t it an utter piece of self-indulgence on the teacher’s part? She might as well have said: “You’ve told me your feelings, Precious, now listen to mine and be healed by them. Heal! Heal!â€� It isn't just schmaltzy, it's phoney. Who could feel the impact of abuse and of utter self-loathing and then feel they were doing anything other than setting Precious up for another fall by making a declaration of love? This incident was only one of many moments by the makers whose carelessness made this a horror film.

    Phil Ince Thu Feb 4 2010
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  • Archgate, I think the connection is there is no connection. A Prophet and Hurt Locker are good. Several times I felt like walking out from Precious. Hmmm .... Not sure I'm lacking imagination if I can see Precious's classmates dancing around her and Miss Rain in Fame-style - perhaps Miss Rain could be saying "Fame costs - and here's where you start paying - in sweat", just as the dance teacher in the original "Fame" series did. I think my version of Precious would be more entertaining and uplifting and less likely to leave the audience feeling suicidal.

    trickydicky Thu Feb 4 2010
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