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IN SAYING EVERYTHING ABOUT A MOVIE? |
| CARMEN JONES (director: Otto Preminger; screenwriters: from the novel by Prosper Merimee/Harry Kleiner; cinematographer: Sam Leavitt; editor: Louis Loeffler; music: Georges Bizet; cast: Dorothy Dandridge (Carmen Jones), Harry Belafonte (Joe), Olga James (Cindy Lou), Pearl Bailey (Frankie), Joe Adams (Husky Miller), Nick Stewart (Dink Franklin), Roy Glenn (Rum Daniels), Diahann Carroll (Myrt); Runtime: 105; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Otto Preminger; Twentieth Century-Fox;1954) |
| "Electric performance by Dorothy
Dandridge as the sultry whorish Carmen Jones."
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Tantalizing re-upholstered Hollywood updating of Bizet's 1875 opera of "Carmen," with an all-black cast. Director Otto Preminger ("Porgy and Bess"/"The Moon is Blue"/"River of No Return") turns in his usual heavy-handed approach to the project, that's an adaptation of the 1943 Broadway triumph but is saddled with the risible lyrics by Oscar Hammerstein II and a bunch of unsympathetic stereotyped and two-dimensional characters. But the energetic cast gives it its all to save it from the doldrums and for the most part succeeds, especially through the electric performance by Dorothy Dandridge as the sultry whorish Carmen Jones who ruins the life of a promising soldier. Though both costars Harry Belafonte and Dorothy Dandridge were pretty good singers, their opera voices were dubbed in by opera singers LeVern Hutcherson and Marilyn Horne. It's based on the novel by Prosper Merimee and is written by Harry Kleiner. It features only African-Americans on an Army base in the segregated
deep South during World War II, where Carmen Jones is a sexy parachute
factory worker on the base and Joe (Harry Belafonte) is a stalwart and
honored
This bouncy musical, living off its fancy nature, has a few Otto moments that sparkle (though I think another director could have served this whimsical material better) and it gets an A for effort. It's noted for Dandridge becoming the first African-American woman to earn an Academy Award Best Actress nomination. REVIEWED ON 1/27/2008 GRADE: B Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |