Toronto
Honeydripper
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Tyrone Purvis - Danny Glover
Delilah - Lisa Gay Hamilton
China Doll - Yaya DaCosta
Maceo - Charles S. Dutton
Slick - Vondie Curtis Hall
Sonny Blake - Gary Clark Jr.
Bertha Mae - Dr. Mable John
Sheriff Pugh - Stacy Keach
In'50s Alabama, the beleaguered Tyrone Purvis (Danny Glover) is deeply in debt and about to lose his roadhouse, the Honeydripper, when he gets a brainstorm: He'll book regional celebrity Guitar Sam to play the club, have the best Saturday night of his life and use the proceeds to pay off the landlord and the chicken man, and to get his nightclub out of hock.
The problem? Purvis doesn't have any money to book Guitar Sam, isn't sure where to find him, and doesn't know if he'd show up anyway. But Purvis steals a load of booze from the liquor man (a cameo by Sayles), and, despite the apprehensions of his buddy Maceo (Charles S. Dutton), starts putting up posters advertising Guitar Sam.
Everything is set up to build to a suspenseful Saturday night, which is effective because the population surrounding Purvis and the Honeydripper is such a well-cut cast of Southern characters. They include Tyrone's queenly house singer Bertha Mae (Dr. Mable John) and her consort Slick (Vondie Curtis Hall); the corpulent white sheriff Pugh (Stacey Keach), who keeps Purvis under constant duress; Purvis' beautiful stepdaughter China Doll (terrific newcomer Yaya DaCosta); and his wife Delilah (Lisa Gay Hamilton), who is having a struggle of the soul choosing between a charismatic church leader and her considerably less devout husband.
Into this mix comes the wandering Sonny Blake (Clark), an itinerant bluesman cut from the Robert Johnson legend, claiming to be as good a player as Guitar Sam and toting a guitar cut out of a solid block of wood. It's electric. No one's ever seen one -- which is no accident. The community around the Honeydripper is supposedly set in 1950s Alabama but it could be the '40s, '30s or '20s -- the point being that for Southern rural black America, not much changed for a long, long time.
Moviegoers may find politics if they want to in "Honeydripper," or they may just be drawn along by the story of a Saturday night when everything could go right or wrong. And no one's really sure until the end which way it's going to be.
Camera (color, 35mm), Dick Pope; music, Mason Daring; music supervisor, Tim Bernett; production designer, Toby Corbett; art director, Eloise Stammerjohn; set decorator, Alice Baker; costume designer, Hope Hanafin; makeup, Diane Maurno; sound (Dolby/SRD), Judy Karp; supervising sound editor, Phil Stockton; associate producers, Ira Deutchmann, Susan Kirr, Mark Wynns; assistant director, Cas Donovan; casting, John Hubbard. Reviewed at Duart Theater, New York, Aug. 9, 2007. (In Toronto Film Festival -- Special Presentations; San Sebastian Film Festival.) MPAA Rating: PG-13. Running time: 122 MIN.
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