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Idlewild...
The staff of BlackAtlanta.com loved the filmography,
dance scenes, star-studded cast, and mix of historical
and new relevance. We checked it out at the Drive In
Movie Theatre... which is under new and IMPROVED managment
we may add!
Southern Speakeasy Provides
Setting for Prohibition-Era Musical Melodrama - REVIEW
POWERED BY BLACKFILM & AUTHOR Kam Williams. To
see full article, click
here
When the visually-enchanting Moulin Rouge was released
in 2001, it caused quite a stir, because it featured
songs by The Beatles, Elton John, David Bowie, Madonna
and other latter-day icons in a period piece that
takes place in 1900, well before any of them were
even born. Despite the glaring anachronisms, however,
the picture went on to land eight Academy Award nominations,
including Best Picture, thereby opening the doors
for others to take similar liberties
with the costume drama genre.
The equally-blasphemous Idlewild represents the first
such attempt to mimic Moulin Rouge’s irreverent
approach to moviemaking, here, mixing hip-hop into
a historical flick set in the Thirties during Prohibition.
The film represents the brash directorial debut of
Bryan Barber, who makes quite a splash via an elaborate
musical throwback replete with chorus lines reminiscent
of an extravagant Busby Berkeley production like Cabin
in the Sky (1943) or 42nd Street (1933).
**The views of this review are not necessarily
the views and opinions of BlackAtlanta.com Staff and
Organization.