Feature
Review | Brown Sugar
Written by: Brian
Orndorf
Dre (Taye Diggs) and Sidney (Sanaa Lathan. “Love And
Basketball“) have been friends since back in the day, when they met
watching rappers freestyle rhymes in the local park. Years later,
their friendship still stands, with Dre a talent scout for a music
company, and Sidney a leading hip-hop journalist. When they reconnect
in New York after years on separate coasts, both of their lives have
changed. Dre is about to be married to a lovely young woman (Nicole
Ari Parker, “Boogie Nights“), and Sidney tries to fight off the
long-dormant feelings she has for Dre. While trying to find out what
happened to the hip-hop of old, Sidney struggles to understand her
tricky situation with Dre, which just so happens to be eroding exactly
when Dre discovers his attraction to her.
“Brown Sugar” is a celebration of love, and a mourning of the
death of hip-hop music. It is the second film from director Rick
Famuyiwa to explore the roots that tie African Americans to hip-hop,
the first being his 1999 comedy “The Wood.” Famuyiwa obviously has
a fondness for the early-80s era of street corner rhymes and break
dancing, and he translates that love without a drip of sweat. “Brown
Sugar” is more about the loss of dignity that hip-hop is currently
going through, and how that loss parallels the ascent into adulthood
for most individuals. It’s fascinating to watch Famuyiwa fiddle
around with this theory, but he loses his control on the subtext
because, in the end, “Brown Sugar” just aches to be a tepid
romantic story.
And there lies the ultimate weakness of the final product. The
romantic “A” plot is so clearly hackneyed, so remarkably
uninteresting, that it’s a real endeavor to sit through. Famuyiwa
doesn’t assist his film by making the hip-hop “B” plot strong
enough that it towers over everything else he has to offer. The most
discouraging part of “Brown Sugar” is that it appears Famuyiwa
truly seems to believe that he’s doing something different with his
romance, something that the audience can’t see coming from a mile
away. He’s wrong, and the film suffers for his naivetй. Maybe
he was too blinded by the power of his two leads (as he should be,
they are both excellent here) to realize that there is precious little
surprise to this drowsy story. The same lackluster effect was in play
in the recent “Sweet Home Alabama,” and while the two films
couldn’t be further apart, they do share a storytelling quality that
suggests laziness when attempting to mount what should be a sweetness,
but instead comes off as laborious instead.
With so much already accomplished in the first hour in setting up
character and tone, Famuyiwa drops the ball when the focus becomes
solely about Dre and Sidney going through the motions over hooking up
for good. You don’t need a doctorate to figure out what going to
happen, but the crucial fun factor isn’t there to support the
formula conclusion. “Brown Sugar” is most compelling when Famuyiwa
is trying to communicate his feelings about the music world and
relationships, and not in the formulaic vessel that carries this tale.
Grade: 5 out of 10
COMMENTS
Date/Time of Posting: Oct 21 2002 / 11:05:38
IP Address: 164.106.251.142
name = peter
Email = illa_emcee@hotmail.com
comments = this was the best movie I've ever seen!!!
Hip-Hop Your The Love Of My LIFE!!!!!!!4 life 4life 4life FOR
LIFE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!4life!
|