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Bessie

  • TV Movie
  • 2015
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
5K
YOUR RATING
Queen Latifah in Bessie (2015)
The story of legendary blues performer, Bessie Smith, who rose to fame during the 1920s and '30s.
Play trailer1:31
2 Videos
25 Photos
BiographyDramaMusic

The story of legendary blues performer Bessie Smith, who rose to fame during the 1920s and '30s.The story of legendary blues performer Bessie Smith, who rose to fame during the 1920s and '30s.The story of legendary blues performer Bessie Smith, who rose to fame during the 1920s and '30s.

  • Director
    • Dee Rees
  • Writers
    • Dee Rees
    • Christopher Cleveland
    • Bettina Gilois
  • Stars
    • Queen Latifah
    • Kamryn Johnson
    • Rikki McKinney
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Dee Rees
    • Writers
      • Dee Rees
      • Christopher Cleveland
      • Bettina Gilois
    • Stars
      • Queen Latifah
      • Kamryn Johnson
      • Rikki McKinney
    • 27User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 4 Primetime Emmys
      • 23 wins & 47 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:31
    Official Trailer
    A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Stories on Screen
    Clip 4:31
    A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Stories on Screen
    A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Stories on Screen
    Clip 4:31
    A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Stories on Screen

    Photos25

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    Top cast99+

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    Queen Latifah
    Queen Latifah
    • Bessie
    Kamryn Johnson
    • Young Bessie
    Rikki McKinney
    • Chorus Guy
    Alan T. Coleman
    • Stagehand
    Tory Kittles
    Tory Kittles
    • Clarence
    Clay Chappell
    • '81' Theatre Owner
    Tika Sumpter
    Tika Sumpter
    • Lucille
    Sharan C. Mansfield
    • Miss Taylor
    • (as Sharan Mansfield)
    Neko Parham
    • Rehearsal Director
    Onira Tares
    Onira Tares
    • Chorus Girl
    • (as Onira Tarés)
    Jhoni Davis
    • Chorus Girl
    Jim R. Coleman
    Jim R. Coleman
    • Host
    Melissa Youngblood
    Melissa Youngblood
    • Theatergoer
    Mo'Nique
    Mo'Nique
    • Ma Rainey
    Jennifer Sears
    Jennifer Sears
    • Ma's Main Girl
    Charles S. Dutton
    Charles S. Dutton
    • Pa Rainey
    Briana Starks
    Briana Starks
    • Ma's Dancer
    Todd Allen Durkin
    Todd Allen Durkin
    • Nightclub Manager
    • Director
      • Dee Rees
    • Writers
      • Dee Rees
      • Christopher Cleveland
      • Bettina Gilois
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews27

    6.74.9K
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    Featured reviews

    Kirpianuscus

    an introduction

    an introduction to a splendid career and bitter life. beautiful, seductive, impressing in few scenes. but only a good and useful introduction to the universe of Bessie Smith. and this is not a real surprise. it represents the recipes of many biopics who use great cast, splendid costumes, recreates the spirit of period but the afraid to make mistakes impose only a sketch of presented personality. sure, it is enough to listen her music for understand it. and against my belief than Viola Davies could be the best choice for the role of Bessie Smith, Queen Latifah does a great job. but not the slices of life, as isolated pieces from a puzzle are the wrong fact but the end who seems be not reasonable. to difficult to recreate in the most inspired manner a spectacular career, Bessie Smith becomes a symbol. a reasonable choice. but, maybe, not the best.
    6ReganRebecca

    Feels like a TV movie

    I knew nothing about Bessie Smith going into this movie. And after watching it I feel like I still know next to nothing. Bessie is the story of legendary '20s and '30s blues singer Bessie Smith. We meet Smith as she is starting out, playing small time nightclubs. She has a great voice and plenty of ambition, but she's going nowhere fast. That is until she spies Ma Rainey (Mo'Nique, stealing all the scenes) and learns to build her act up.

    The problem with the film is that it tries to cover too much ground. It covers about 20 years in Bessie's life, from her start working in small clubs, to her success and decline and eventual comeback. The lack of focus makes the film feel abrupt as their are just too many characters and not enough of a through line as people come in and out of Bessie's life.

    Queen Latifah does a good job as Smith. But ironically she ends up completely upstaged by Mo'nique even though in real life the reverse is true. Mo'nique has a small role and only appears in about the first quarter of a movie, but she simply owns every inch of the screen when she's on it. She has a beautiful voice, you can tell she's a singer just by the way she speaks, and a commanding swagger. Once she leaves she takes a lot of excitement with her. She leaves the impression that she could have handled a film about Ma Rainey. The rest of the cast is solid. Tika Sumpter looks gorgeous in a mostly nothing role, playing Smith's long time companion. Michael K. Williams manages to make a solid impression as a brash bodyguard turned lover as Smith's husband.

    The real star of the show are the costumes. Note perfect, sumptuous and gorgeous they make every scene appealing and are always photographed to perfection. Even while the rest of the movie disappoints the clothing is always there to give something for the eye to enjoy.
    6robkle666

    Average

    Well, i had very high expectations for this film after watching the trailer... but, it wasn't quite so. It actually was a good movie, but not what i expected. It could have been an epic, like La Mome or Ray, but it just missed that opportunity.

    The story is somewhat incoherent, maybe it's the script, or just bad editing. There were some scenes that are short and take place in different times, so it becomes hard to follow and understand the story and the importance of those scenes. It's a little bit confusing at times and because of that the film loses flow. That is basically the one major flaw in this movie.

    Apart from that, the actors did a great job, i've never seen Queen Latifah like this, she was wonderful. The music was great of course. The costumes, the set - beautiful.

    In conclusion, i wouldn't call this a masterpiece, but it's not bad, i would recommend watching it on a Friday night with your loved one maybe. The plot is interesting, the music is wonderful, it sets that 20's mood and you'll have a great time for sure.
    mukava991

    It's Tough Out There for a Biopic Maker

    A movie about some aspect of Bessie Smith's life is decades overdue, considering the broad cultural shadow she casts. A few episodes of her tumultuous life explored in depth would resonate, but like too many biopics, this one suffers from the creators' attempt to tell the whole story, or most it, and the results are mechanical, predictable and force-fitted into various agendas. Most biopic makers stumble upon these rocks. Their task is difficult.

    From the start of "Bessie" we are told five things over and over: Bessie was haunted throughout her life by memories of the mother she lost as a child. Bessie had lesbian dalliances. Bessie loved to drink straight gin, preferably right out of the bootlegger's glass jar. Bessie had a violent temper. Bessie was a fiercely independent, take-charge kind of gal. But the main thing about Bessie that is presented only sporadically and by rote is her distinctive singing and how it came to be that way. Queen Latifah, who would seem to be a fine choice for this role, does suggest Smith in girth and even in facial features, but despite a strong voice which she tries to adapt to the Smith groove, she never makes us feel the rafters rising as the Smith legend tells us. The only time she approaches the true Smith sound is near the end when hard living had begun to ravage her vocal chords. And in the early scenes Latifah, given her age and physicality, cannot possibly persuade us that she is a young, unformed artist-to-be.

    The attempt to demonstrate how she gradually upstaged her mentor, Ma Rainey (played to the hilt by Mo'Nique), is episodic and sketchy, not organic or dramatic; the same goes for the re-enactments of Smith's altercations with members of the high-toned Manhattan art scene in the 1920s and early 1930s. Some good substance is made of her volatile love affairs with men (Michael Kenneth Williams and Mike Epps). But her mid-career slump is presented as with no explanation or cause, other than perhaps the Great Depression. SPOILER ALERT: Her tragic death (a potential movie in itself) is entirely absent, as "Bessie" ends in mid-air, or mid- road, as we are left with her musings about where she will go next after a picnic with her former bootlegger.

    So, a point has been scored for Bessie Smith. It opens a conversation. But more is needed.
    7A_Different_Drummer

    Definitely NOT "about the music"

    The year was 1972 and the challenge for director Sidney J. Furie was how to translate the biography of Billie Holliday into something that had "bite" for the mainstream.

    He succeeded, in large part by his decision to make the story as much about the music as the personal travails of the famous singer.

    At the time it seemed the obvious choice. Yet, flash forward 43 years and today the team behind this project, faced with the exact same choice, took the road less travelled.

    It is not as if Queen L. does not have a set of pipes. After years of appearing in a string of "commodity" lifetime/lifestyle/X-mas movies -- in parts which leveraged off her infectious natural sweetness -- she stunned audiences worldwide with her performance of I KNOW WHERE I've BEEN in 2007.

    (For the record, how perfect was she in that performance?? This reviewer has that song in every mix he owns and never gets tired of it. Her performance was so flawless that she could have won IDOL on that single track alone.)

    This is a hard film to review. A lot of talent behind the camera, a lot of talent in front of the camera, and all of it hamstrung by the executive decision to downplay the music and focus on the strife.

    Larger than life people have larger than life problems. But we already knew that. Personally, I missed the tunes.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Mo'Nique was offered the role of Viola, but she refused because she had played that type of character before. Reading the script, she liked Ma Rainey and asked HBO if it was possible to play that character.
    • Quotes

      Bessie Smith: I ain't playing second to nobody!

    • Connections
      Featured in The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: Queen Latifah/Sam Rockwell/Something Rotten! (2015)
    • Soundtracks
      Gimme a Pigfoot and a Bottle of Beer
      Written by Wesley Wilson (uncredited)

      Remixed and Produced by Adam Blackstone and Queen Latifah

      Additional Orchestration and Scoring by Stephen Tirpak (as Steve Tirpak)

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    FAQ1

    • Fun fact about this movie

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 16, 2015 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 藍調天后
    • Filming locations
      • Olde Town Conyers, Georgia, USA(Chattanooga Streets)
    • Production companies
      • HBO Films
      • Flavor Unit Entertainment
      • The Zanuck Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 55 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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