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Oprah Winfrey, Mara Brock Akil And Michele Weaver On 'Love Is__,' Heartache And Lessons Learned

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Black women aren’t often given the opportunity to tell our love stories publicly. Instead, our courtships, regrets, and lustful encounters are whispered about amongst our girlfriends. Epic love stories -- the ones that we see in movie theaters or on TV screens are typically reserved for white women, while advice from male “relationship experts,” and unfounded statistics are strewn across social media platforms and news sites telling Black women all the reasons we can't find love. With her new romance series, Love Is__ writer/showrunner Mara Brock Akil is reclaiming the romance genre for Black women by sharing her own very intimate story – a tale of how she and her husband, writer/director Salim Akil fell deeply in love. Love Is__ follows Nuri (portrayed by Michele Weaver) a rising writer in '90s Black Hollywood whose settling into her career in LA, making a name or herself, and furnishing her newly purchased home. Her life collides with Yasir (portrayed by Will Catlett), an aspiring writer-director without two nickels to rub together. Told from the perspective of the couple 20 years in the future, with music from everyone from Brownstone to Lauryn Hill contributing to the soundtrack, Akil invites you into this exhilarating time in her life, one that was full of romance, heartache, and so much magic. At the Love Is__ premiere in Los Angeles, I chatted with Akil, OWN CEO Oprah Winfrey and Weaver about the series, the power of Black love, and what can grasp from heartache.

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: black love, Black Women, chocolategirlinterviews, Love Is, mara brock akil, Michele Weaver, Oprah Winfrey, OWN
categories: Film/TV
Tuesday 06.19.18
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Mara Brock Akil And Salim Akil Talk Their Seductive New Show 'Love Is ___' With Series Leads Will Catlett & Michele Weaver

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Love stories were made for the screen. There is a magic that comes with falling, diving in head first, and allowing yourself to become connected and enraptured with another soul. In romance films, the audience is pulled under quickly, caught up in the first mesmerizing moments of desire and lust. However, television allows artists and audiences to unpack the nuances of love. We are able to suss out the grit and imperfections that come with entangling two lives together. The enchantment is still there obviously, but there is also space for the reality of it all, the past relationships, finances, and the grind of daily life. Set in Los Angeles in the 1990’s, married Hollywood dream team Mara Brock Akil and Salim Akil -- who've brought us series like, Girlfriends, The Game, and Black Lightning, present Love Is__. A love story based loosely off of their relationship, the gorgeously shot drama follows Nuri (portrayed by Michele Weaver) and Yasir (portrayed by Will Catlett). Told from the perspective of the couple twenty years into the future, wiser Nuri (Wendy Davis) and Yasir (Clarke Peters) reflect on their initial spark. At different points in the lives and careers when they first meet, the pair sees something special in one another. When they first connect Nuri is a new homeowner with a coveted position in the writer’s room on a new black sitcom, Marvin. Yasir, on the other hand, is struggling in LA. A recent transplant from the Bay – he's an aspiring writer/director who is trying to make his last two unemployment checks stretch as far as possible. A week before the Love Is__ series premiere, I sat in the OWN offices in Los Angeles to chat with the Akils, Catlett, and Weaver about bringing the sexy and rich love story to the big screen, what it was like to reflect back on the ‘90s, and why seeing Black love on screen is so healing.

https://youtu.be/ZgRXkypO5_Y

Continue reading at Shadow and Act.

tags: black love, chocoltegirlinterviews, mara brock akil, Michele Weaver, Oprah Winfrey, OWN, salim akil, Will Catlett
categories: Film/TV
Tuesday 06.19.18
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

Film Review || Beyond the Lights

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"It's not my business what you had with her, and now I see that you're not free of her. And it was foolish to compete with her, but my fractured heart cries 'Choose Me'". ~ Noni JeanIn this media obsessed society we are constantly bombarded with images of celebrities. We have become constant voyeurs, looking from the outside in. We form our opinions about celeb lives from tabloids and photographs, never truly knowing what it is that we are judging or praising.  Gina Prince- Bythewood’s Beyond the Lights gives us a rare and intricate look at the life of a fast-rising star, from the inside out.

Prince-Bythewood’s third feature film follows, Noni Jean (Gugu Mbatha- Raw) a young entertainer who is on a fast track to major fame, but who is suffocating internally. Mega-sexualized, overworked and bitterly unhappy, Noni has become a puppet, controlled by her label and her mother/manager, Macy (Minnie Driver).  Nauseated by the stage-show that has become her life, Noni decides to jump from the balcony of her hotel room.
Kaz (Nate Parker) is the police officer assigned to Noni the evening she attempts suicide. Though he’s able to talk her out of leaping to her death, Naz is disgusted by the circus and lies that follow the incident. (He's a true boy scout at heart.) Unwilling to be sucked into Noni's circus, Kaz attempts to walk away. Despite his efforts, their connection crackles and ignites.
Noni  is drawn to Kaz's quiet, damn near broody nature.(Parker is perfect in the role. He’s constantly watching, quietly observing, taking her all in.) Likewise, Kaz is intrigued by Noni's spirit. She's hidden somewhere behind the image that she presents to the world.
The film is breathtaking because of the exquisite  performances. So often romantic dramas fall into the realm of corny.(And this is from a sappy girl who appreciates a bit of corniness.)  Few films, those like Love Jones (1997) and The Notebook (2004) speak universally to audiences about love.  The honesty in those films is what connects us. Mbatha-Raw and Parker's performances are so electric that they remain believable throughout the entire film. Their characters become more of themselves as their connection deepens. Prince-Bythewood made the decision to strip Noni bare both mentally and physically. As the film progresses the layers of makeup, hair and costuming are peeled away until Mbatha-Raw's bare face is left staring wide-eyed at us.
Kaz becomes more himself as well, perhaps in ways that he least expected to. Often it's the paths that we so rigidly insist on following that are holding us back from our densities. (I really could wax poetic about how delicious Nate Parker looked in this film, but that’s neither here nor there...)
The man doesn't even have any facial hair and I'm STILL here for it! (Y'all know my disgust for lack of facial hair.)
Another standout performance in the film is Minnie Driver as Noni's mother, Macy Jean. A shrewd woman, she seems to value Noni’s image over her well-being. The beauty in the role is that Prince-Bythewood refrains from making Macy completely villainous. She has layers and complexities just like anyone else.
The film is extremely contemporary, it's very much a romance of this moment. It does not shy away from issues of mental health, race, class, celebrity culture and sex. I also really enjoyed the equality dynamic amongst the pair in terms of their careers and ambitions. (Don't nobody want a lazy ass partner.)
Beyond the Lights is lovely. Arguably better than Prince-Bythewood's first feature Love & Basketball (2001). (I'm sure there will be a thousand debates about this.) The performances are outstanding, the music is entertaining and the chemistry is extremely sexy. (Did I mention Nate Parker?!! Gugu is also stunning and you should check her out in Belle if you have not seen it.)  I know one thing, I shall never view plane takeoffs the same (surfbort). I’d even go out on a limb and say that men will enjoy the film as much as women.
Go head on Ms. Prince-Bythewood, continue to make them tell your stories! I'm so here for Black women directing mainstream films. (Ava DuVernay's Selma is up next.)
Beyond the Lights is in theaters November 14. (Take your boo, your mama and them. Or just take yourself, you're worth the date.)
xoxoxo Chocolate Girl in the City xoxoxoxox
PS. Nate Parker
tags: Beyond the Lights, black film- black female director, black love, chocolategirlreviews, chocolategirlscreens, film, Gina Price Bythewood, romance
categories: Film/TV
Thursday 11.13.14
Posted by Aramide Tinubu
 

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