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American Fiction
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Movie:
Video:
Audio:
Extras:
Final Score:
AV NIRVANA is member and reader-supported. When you purchase an item using our links, we might earn an affiliate commission.
It’s amazing to watch to comedic films try and tackle the issue or race, pandering, and other tensions within the world right now from African American directors/actors, and watch one fail so dramatically, and the other slip under the radar but be the better production. Naturally I’m talking about American Society of Magical Negroes and American Fiction. It was almost awe inspiring to watch American Society of Magical Negroes literally touch on some of the VERY SAME issues that American Fiction did, and yet watch it literally burn itself to the ground, losing all good will to the point that even the people defending the former film had to throw in the towel and say “yeahhhh, even we can’t hold this one up. Yet it was the one that got all of the publicity (and they say there’s no such thing as bad publicity), while American Fiction pretty much slid straight under the radar for most folks. Kind of makes you ponder on the idea of messages, and how to actually craft a message so that the general public finds it appealing (also, VERY ironically, one of the big subjects OF American Fiction). Anyways, I was sort of burnt out after watching The American Society of Magical Negroes, but I have huge respect for Jeffrey Wright as an actor, so I decided to request the film from Warner and give it a spin. And luckily for you, I didn’t choose in vain.
Part scathing satire, part familiar conflict based melodrama, American Fiction tells the story of one Thelonious “Monk” Ellison (Jeffrey Wright), a highly intellectual author and literary professor who has a problem. He’s an upper middle class black author who hasn’t sold or published a book in years. He lives with his head in the intellectual clouds, and his sales have sort of proved that what he’s writing isn’t to the general public’s tastes. After getting laid off from his teaching position, Monk heads back home to Boston to spend time with his mother and siblings, only for tragedy to strike. His sister Lisa (Tracee Ellis Ross) dies shortly after arrival, and his mother is slipping deeper and deeper into dementia. Monk has no idea how to handle everything, as his recently uncloseted brother Cliff (Sterling K. Brown) is a bit of a mess, and he’s the only responsible one left.
So caught between a midlife personal crisis and an ACTUAL familial crisis, Monk angrily decides to right a complete “trash” novel under a pseudonym. One of those ebonics filled, black cliché ridden novels that appeals to the base consumer instincts of watching a train wreck. Monk originally did so as a middle finger to the publishers. A sort of “bleep you” to the people who have been poo-pooing his much headier and more intellectual works for years. The only thing is, every publisher in the nation pretty much falls in love with it. Now Monk is forced to make a choice between intellectual honesty, and keeping with his true ideals, and making absolute BANK off a puff piece book whose only sole purpose is to assuage the general public’s interest in “real street stuff”.
If I have to complain at all, I think that American Fiction has some difficulty in balancing both Monk’s obsession with finding his voice in the literary world AND his familiar conflicts evenly. At times the film feels like two films in one, with two different endings and a sensation that some of the familial issues COULD have been cut out. It’s not that those are two incompatible sub plots, but I couldn’t help but feel that American Fiction sometimes felt like a movie at odds with itself. That being said, I enjoyed the film way more than I didn’t, and found that it was probably one of my most enjoyable watches of the year.
Rating:
Rated R for language throughout, some drug use, sexual references and brief violence.
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As I said above, I was genuinely surprised by American Fiction. It wasn’t what I was expecting, and Cord Jefferson’s first feature film actually turned out to be a very solid flick. It handles some delicate subject matters in a delightfully charming and yet poignant way, and did so in a way that didn’t drag itself down with political infighting. Jeffrey Wright was absolutely fantastic, and Warner did a very solid job with the Blu-ray (outside of the criminal offense of ZERO extras on the disc). Very solid watch.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Jeffrey Wright, Tracee Ellis Ross, John Ortiz, Adam Brody, Issa Rae
Directed by: Cord Jefferson
Written by: Cord Jefferson, Percival Everett (novel)
Aspect Ratio: 2.39:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1 French, Spanish DD 5.1, English DVS 5.1
Subtitles: English, French, Spnaish
Studio: Warner Brothers
Rated: NR
Runtime: 117 minutes
Blu-Ray Release Date: June 18th, 2024
Recommendation: Good Watch
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