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IMDbPro

Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

  • 2020
  • R
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
60K
YOUR RATING
Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman in Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (2020)
Chicago, 1927. A recording session. Tensions rise between Ma Rainey (Viola Davis), her ambitious horn player (Chadwick Boseman), and the white management determined to control the legendary "Mother of the Blues." Based on Pulitzer Prize winner August Wilson's play.
Play trailer2:21
33 Videos
99+ Photos
Period DramaDramaMusic

Tensions rise when trailblazing blues singer Ma Rainey and her band gather at a recording studio in Chicago in 1927.Tensions rise when trailblazing blues singer Ma Rainey and her band gather at a recording studio in Chicago in 1927.Tensions rise when trailblazing blues singer Ma Rainey and her band gather at a recording studio in Chicago in 1927.

  • Director
    • George C. Wolfe
  • Writers
    • Ruben Santiago-Hudson
    • August Wilson
  • Stars
    • Viola Davis
    • Chadwick Boseman
    • Glynn Turman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    60K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • George C. Wolfe
    • Writers
      • Ruben Santiago-Hudson
      • August Wilson
    • Stars
      • Viola Davis
      • Chadwick Boseman
      • Glynn Turman
    • 434User reviews
    • 228Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Oscars
      • 83 wins & 193 nominations total

    Videos33

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    Official Trailer
    The Rise of Viola Davis
    Clip 4:01
    The Rise of Viola Davis
    The Rise of Viola Davis
    Clip 4:01
    The Rise of Viola Davis
    Best Moments From the 2021 Oscars Telecast
    Clip 2:54
    Best Moments From the 2021 Oscars Telecast
    Art of the Crew | Production Design
    Clip 1:02
    Art of the Crew | Production Design
    Art of the Crew | Makeup and Hairstyling
    Clip 1:01
    Art of the Crew | Makeup and Hairstyling
    Art of the Crew | Costume Design
    Clip 1:10
    Art of the Crew | Costume Design

    Photos134

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    + 128
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    Top cast52

    Edit
    Viola Davis
    Viola Davis
    • Ma Rainey
    Chadwick Boseman
    Chadwick Boseman
    • Levee
    Glynn Turman
    Glynn Turman
    • Toledo
    Colman Domingo
    Colman Domingo
    • Cutler
    Michael Potts
    Michael Potts
    • Slow Drag
    Jeremy Shamos
    Jeremy Shamos
    • Irvin
    Jonny Coyne
    Jonny Coyne
    • Sturdyvant
    Taylour Paige
    Taylour Paige
    • Dussie Mae
    Dusan Brown
    Dusan Brown
    • Sylvester
    Joshua Harto
    Joshua Harto
    • Policeman
    Quinn VanAntwerp
    Quinn VanAntwerp
    • Band Singer
    Chloe Davis
    Chloe Davis
    • Ma Rainey's Dancer
    Mayte Natalio
    • Ma Rainey's Dancer
    Johanna Elmina Moise
    Johanna Elmina Moise
    • Ma Rainey's Dancer
    • (as Johanna Moise)
    Onyxx Noel
    • Ma Rainey's Dancer
    LaWanda Hopkins
    • Ma Rainey's Dancer
    Sierra Stewart
    • Ma Rainey's Dancer
    Malaiyka Reid
    Malaiyka Reid
    • Ma Rainey's Dancer
    • Director
      • George C. Wolfe
    • Writers
      • Ruben Santiago-Hudson
      • August Wilson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews434

    6.959.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8Cineanalyst

    The Blues Singer

    "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom" is certainly of interest as a biopic of the "Mother of the Blues" Ma Rainey (as played by Viola Davis) and for the last great screen performance from the late Chadwick Boseman as the fictional trumpeter Levee in Ma's band. Beyond this, it's partly hindered as an extension of the stage in the same way that Denzel Washington's adaptation of another of August Wilson's Pittsburg Cycle of plays, "Fences" (2016), was, but this adaptation by Ruben Santiago-Hudson and directed by Goerge C. Wolfe, although still including Washington as a producer, largely transcends its staginess by reflexively being about the process of adapting stage performance to recorded media, from musical concert to recording session--just as the movie is a recorded adaptation from live theatre. Unlike most filmed plays, its theatricality reflects its narrative.

    Moreover, it's set in 1927, which, whether or not the filmmakers intended the allusion, was also the year of the film "The Jazz Singer," the heralded first feature-length synchronized sound film and film musical. Apt for a Netflix release about recording music, and, more than that, "The Jazz Singer," among other things, is also about what today might be more-politely termed cultural appropriation, as evidenced most notoriously in the blackface sequence. That 1927 film is about the clashing and harmonizing of cultures in general, really: part silent and part talkie, Judaism and show business, the whiteness of the film's jazz singer and the origins of the music from black musicians as called attention to in the controversial blackface worn by Al Jolson. Point is, some of the same issues are brought up in "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom."

    Boseman's Levee wants to play his own, jazzier, more-swinging music as opposed to performing in Ma Rainey's "jug band," while at the same time there's no denying the influence of her blues on the history of popular music, including collaborating with the likes of Louis Armstrong and Bessie Smith. Ma also retains her own voice, whereas "Baby, Let Me Have It All" (which with its "jelly rolls" makes me think of Jelly Roll Morton, in addition to how raunchy these old tunes about "rolls" and the titular "bottom" are, but I digress) is coopted by a white band and studio owner. Besides this, the characters take part in a series of theatrical monologues and dialogues on racial issues, religion and other matters, and there's Ma's reported homosexual relationships, one of which was rumored to be with Smith. Again, such a connection may've not been intended--indeed, such an artifact of Jewish identity and white culture would be out of place here in a sense--but the parallels are manifold and felicitous in the sense of cinematic heritage.

    Although its reflexivity, including a particular focus on the technical aspects of recording, are what raises this title above a mere filmed play, the costumes and production design also help, and there are a few different locales beyond the record studio to open the play up. Even the cinematography of the sweat on the figures' faces throughout the exhausting performances and hot-summer recording session recommends itself. The opening concert scene is a standout, and it, reportedly, includes the one bit of Davis doing her own singing. The rest said to be performed for by soul singer Maxayn Lewis. The same sources say Boseman actually learned to play the trumpet, although I would be surprised if his playing weren't also aided by modern sound-recording tricks. Regardless, Davis and Boseman headline a superb overall cast. Davis is especially imposing in looking the part of a legendary historical figure. And Boseman is surely the sentimental favorite for a posthumous Oscar this year, and his performance might just very well deserve it. There are a couple moments that are overly stagy--the more sudden outbursts of speechifying in particular, but even that may be followed by a helluva powerful monologue such as of Levee's story of his childhood. Overall, his performance transcends any fun-loving jazzcat stereotype in a similar vein to the picture overcoming its being a filmed play. The business with Levee's obsession with that "trap" door is a neat metaphor in both respects. He and his character become artists. It's a moving conclusion to a career tragically cut far too short. Yet, just as records immortalized the blues singing of Ma Rainey, or these adaptations have done for August Wilson's plays, motion pictures have done likewise for the artistry of Chadwick Boseman.
    8Xstal

    Black Magic...

    A lesson in the art of acting and film making, as an exceptional cast of extremely talented actors portray several hours in a recording studio, the tensions as taut as any wire, the crimes of the times and their effects on those involved in full view - crimes perpetuated into today, sadly.
    8Neon_Gold

    A Play Put On Film

    I didn't really know much about this movie going in so i was surprised to find out that it was based on a play but after watching it you can see that fact from a mile off.

    The film is soaked in play-like monologues and limited sets and the framing. It works so well. It is such a dialogue heavy movie that it could run the risk of being a little bit slow but it is just that well acted and the dynamics and topics are so well thought out that you find time flying by while watching.

    The characters are really 3 dimensional and you understand who they are. This is all backed up by the acting. For the most part everyone in this movie hits it out of the park. i really love Colman Domingo and he really shines in this film. He just has a charm that draws you to any character that he plays. Chadwick was really great too. His emotional scenes really sweep the rug out from under your feet and i really wasn't expecting him to be able to do that he was really great. And Viola Davis is just fantastic. I love how she just dives head first into her characters and just lives in them. It reads so well on screen. She just embodies the role even down to the way she walks is just done to perfection.

    There isn't a whole lot of story because it is very character based but it does things to keep it fresh and i found it to be really shocking at times and took turns that you really wouldn't expect.

    The costumes are also really well done. I would guess that they would get an Oscar nod because they are fantastic.

    I would defiantly see this movie especially if you love character studies and want to feel like you looking though a window into a day in the life of these people.
    8gsygsy

    In memoriam

    First things first. Chadwick Boseman gives a performance like nothing you've ever seen. The rest of the cast, led by the legend that is Viola Davis, is, as might be expected, tip-top, but Mr Boseman flies ever higher in every scene.

    The film is based on a famous play by a great playwright who chose to write with a sense of melodrama that can still work in the theatre but somehow feels dated when transfered to the screen. The camera has to cope with the sheer size of performance necessary to capture set-piece speeches, which go against the grain of image-led cinema. Renowned Broadway director George C Wolfe gets the actors to the right temperature, but then has to find a way to make the project cinematic. The solutions here, apart from minimal opening out from the claustrophobia of the recording studio setting, are some mobile camera work and quite a bit of nimble editing. Curiously, though, these strategies simply emphasise the work's stage origins. What do work are the close-ups. They bring us closer to the characters than can ever happen on a stage. With an ensemble as fine as this one, the more close-ups the better.

    So, MA RAINEY'S BLACK BOTTOM, like the film of Wilson's play FENCES, is not satisfying as a movie, but as a record of a powerful play. Both well worth seeing. MA RAINEY is the greater, because of Chadwick Boseman. What an amazing actor. What a loss. What a legacy.
    5BabyIDontCare

    Disappointing

    I would have much rather seen a proper biopic of Ma Rainey than this movie version of a play where, with the exception of one chap banging on and on about his shoes, very little actually happens.

    The Legacy of Chadwick Boseman

    The Legacy of Chadwick Boseman

    Chadwick Boseman is known for his iconic performances in Get on Up, Black Panther, and his final role in the musical drama Ma Rainey's Black Bottom. IMDb takes a celebratory look at his career in film and television.
    Watch the video
    Editorial Image
    3:38

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In 2015, Denzel Washington announced that he would be bringing all ten of August Wilson's "Century Cycle" plays to the big or small screen. Ma Rainey's Black Bottom is the second filmed Wilson adaptation Washington has produced in this cycle, after Fences (2016). In September 2020, Washington told the New York Times that the third film in the series would be The Piano Lesson, and that he hoped to cast his own son John David Washington and Samuel L. Jackson, with Barry Jenkins directing.
    • Goofs
      The action of the film takes place on July 2, 1927. Ma Rainey's car in the film is a Model A Ford which were not introduced to the public until December 1927.
    • Quotes

      Ma Rainey: They don't care nothin' about me. All they want is my voice. Well, I done learned that. And they gonna treat me the way I wanna be treated, no matter how much it hurt them.

    • Crazy credits
      During the first part of the credits, actual photographs of the real Ma Rainey and the musicians who inspired the characters in the play are shown.
    • Connections
      Featured in Sky News @Breakfast: Episode dated 19 December 2020 (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      Deep Moaning Blues
      Written by Ma Rainey (as Gertrude 'Ma' Rainey)

      Produced and Arranged by Branford Marsalis

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    FAQ18

    • How long is Ma Rainey's Black Bottom?Powered by Alexa
    • Did Viola Davis do her own singing or was it dubbed?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 18, 2020 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • La madre del blues
    • Filming locations
      • Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
    • Production companies
      • Escape Artists
      • Mundy Lane Entertainment
      • Netflix
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 34 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.00 : 1

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    Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman in Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (2020)
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