Posts Tagged Taraji P. Henson
Taken from Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story: TV review [Lifetime]
Posted by Amy Steele in TV on January 30, 2011
Do you know how many children I have? Just one. I’m not going to be patient.
–Tiffany Rubin [Taraji P. Henson]
Based on a true story, Taken from Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story reveals the risky plan that school teacher and mother Tiffany Rubin [Academy Award® -nominee Tarji P. Henson] took to rescue her son Kobe [Drew Davis] after the boy’s father abducts him and takes him to South Korea. Tifanny agrees to let her ex-boyfriend take Kobe for the weekend to Disneyworld. She buys Kobe a cell phone and worries about letting him go but realizes she cannot keep her son away from his father. Days later, she hasn’t heard anything from Kobe and finds herself in a nightmare scenario. After exhausting every conceivable path imaginable, Tiffany turns to Mark Miller [Emmy Award®-winner Terry O’Quinn] and his charitable organization The American Association for Lost Children. As a teacher, Tiffany accesses a teaching-exchange web site in South Korea and locates her son. From there, she and Mark come up with a plan to travel to South Korea and bring home Kobe. They have a limited window of opportunity to get Kobe from his school to the U.S. Embassy where as U.S. citizens they are safe from any prosecution by South Korea. The daunting aspect is that if Kobe’s father finds out what’s happening and reports Tiffany and Mark to the authorities, they’d end up being prosecuted. As Tiffany, Henson convincingly elicits fear, frustration and anger at her devastating situation. Viewers know that Tiffany will succeed or the story wouldn’t be a Lifetime movie. It’s well-done and has enough intrigue to keep us engaged.
Taken from Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story premieres on Lifetime on Monday, January 31 at 9pm [ET/PT]
Taraji P. Henson would “rather go naked” for PETA
Posted by Amy Steele in Celebs, Film, TV on January 28, 2011
Taraji P. Henson is the latest actress to join the animal rights activism ranks with PETA for the “I’d rather go naked than wear fur” campaign.
btw: **When will PETA have I’d rather be vegan ads?**
the 40-year-old actress [The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Karate Kid] states:
“I don’t think a living being should suffer for the sake of fashion, period. End of story.”
“When I realized what went into – not just, we’re not just even talking about a full-length fur coat, I’m talking about just … fur on your gloves or on your jacket or – what goes into making that little piece of fur ripped my heart out,” Taraji continued. “And as humans, we have control. What if someone said, ‘Black skin is the new fur’?”
source: PETA
Taraji stars in the Lifetime original movie Taken From Me: The Tiffany Rubin Story which premieres Monday, January 31 at 9 PM ET/PT
CELEBS: Fabulous Forty-somethings
Posted by Amy Steele in Celebs on July 28, 2010
Since I’m turning 41 on August 5, I thought I’d round up some female celebs I like who are in their 40s.
Renee Zellweger
– Bridget Jones’s Diary, The Whole Wide World
Illeana Douglas
– Grace of My Heart, Wedding Bell Blues
Halle Berry
– Monster’s Ball, Things We Lost in the Fire
Juliette Binoche
– Breaking and Entering, The English Patient
Parker Posey
– Party Girl, Best in Show, Broken English
Julianna Margulies
– The Good Wife
Christy Turlington
–model/ activist
Naomi Watts
– The Painted Veil, Eastern Promises
Salma Hayek
– Frida, Ugly Betty
Rachel Weisz
– The Brothers Bloom, The Fountain, The Constant Gardner
Jennifer Connelly
– Little Children, Blood Diamond, The House of Sand and Fog
Taraji P. Henson
– Karate Kid, I Can Do Wrong All By Myself, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Marisa Tomei
– Cyrus, The Wrestler
Lucy Liu
– Charlie’s Angels, Kill Bill Vol. 1
Portia de Rossi
– Arrested Development, Ally McBeal
Vivica A. Fox
– Curb Your Enthusiasm, Kill Bill Vol. 1
Kristin Davis
– Melrose Place, Sex & the City
Helena Bonham-Carter
– Alice in Wonderland, A Room with a View
Famke Janssen
– Love & Sex, Nip/Tuck
Elizabeth Hurley
– Double Whammy, The Weight of Water
I Can Do Bad All By Myself: out on DVD NOW
Posted by Amy Steele in DVD on January 16, 2010
People say Tyler Perry’s films are formulaic, his films are sexist, and his films revolve around weak women relying on men and the church to save them. Well, I am not an expert on Tyler Perry films—I’ve only seen Diary of a Mad Black Woman and Why Did I Get Married?– but I am a feminist and I was not offended by I Can Do Bad All By Myself. I have not seen all the Madea films because that caricature just turns me off. I saw a Friday matinee of I Can Do Bad All By Myself in Boston. The audience was composed of mostly African-American women. I didn’t see any men and am almost positive I was the only white woman in the crowd. I’m not surprised. I’ve read that Tyler Perry’s demographic is African-American women over 30.
In her article “Tyler Perry’s Gender Problem” in The Nation, Courtney Young wrote: “Though Perry repeatedly references his admiration for and allegiance to African-American women as a foundation of his work, his portrayal of women of color undermines the complexity of their experience through his reductionist approach to the characters and his dependence on disquieting gender politics. Perry may see himself as crating modern-day fairy tales for black women, but what he may not realize is that fairy tales, in general, have never been kind to women.“
I agree with Young about women and fairy tales. There rarely is a happily ever after if you look beyond the sparkles, roses, and gowns. I disagree that I Can Do Bad All By Myself is an example of a fairy tale masquerading as another Tyler Perry film. It’s moving and effective. It focuses on a singer who is in a really bad place [and can’t at least a few people relate to this? I certainly could and so could apparently more than a few vocal audience members].
April [Taraji P. Henson], a nightclub singer, has fallen into a comfortable lifestyle with her abusive married boyfriend [Brian J. White] who supplements her income. She’s unmotivated to make life changes; she’s rather selfish and isolated from family and friends. Okay, so the woman needs much better self-esteem. It will either come to her or it won’t. She will realize that she herself can do it on her own at some point or she will self-destruct because the way she downs alcohol she is on her way down that road. Madea [Tyler Perry] catches 16-year-old Jennifer [a very talented Hope Wilson] and her two brothers breaking into her home, she brings them to the house of their Aunt April, who is not happy to see them. April soon finds out that her mother has died and these kids have no one else.
Yes, there’s another man in the picture: a cute handyman named Sandino [CSI Miami’s Adam Rodriguez] but he’s not there to sweep her off her feet. He’s just perhaps going to nudge her along a bit. He’s wonderful with children and has that easy-going, Zen nature. To think that she will improve her life solely due to the influences of a man is completely insulting to audiences. Relationships can help augment someone’s life but for anyone to think that April would not have decided what to do with her niece and nephews on her own time without meeting Sandino is downright insulting to April. She’s a strong woman who’s made some mistakes in the past. Henson is bold, and emotional in every scene. She acts with her eyes. Those wide, brown eyes are the windows into every emotion April feels. It works and she turns in a commanding, near tear-jerking performance in I Can Do Bad All By Myself. That Madea shows up ended up being okay because her scenes were few and far between and remarkably toned down. There was just enough Madea to provide comic relief from the seriousness at hand and not enough to engulf the audience in her absurdity.
Best Film Performances of 2009
Posted by Amy Steele in Film on January 1, 2010
Audrey Tautou in Coco Avant Chanel
Abbie Cornish in Bright Star
Eli Roth in Inglourious Basterds
Hilary Swank in Amelia
Ellen Page and Kristen Wiig in Whip It!
Melanie Laurent in Inglourious Basterds
Taraji P. Henson in I Can Do Bad All by Myself
Meryl Streep in Julie and Julia
Sharlto Copley in District 9
Jeremy Renner in The Hurt Locker
Hugh Dancy in Adam
Sasha Gray in The Girlfriend Experience
Alison Lohman in Drag Me to Hell
Jessica Biel and Colin Firth in Easy Virtue
Zooey Deschanel and Joseph Gordon-Levitt in 500 Days of Summer
Mark Ruffalo, Rachel Weisz and Adrien Brody in The Brothers Bloom
Russell Crowe in State of Play
Mo’Nique in Precious
Emily Blunt in The Young Victoria
George Clooney in Up in the Air
Vera Farmiga in Up in the Air
I Can Do Bad All By Myself: Film Review
Posted by Amy Steele in Film on September 14, 2009
People say Tyler Perry’s films are formulaic, his films are sexist, and his films revolve around weak women relying on men and the church to save them. Well, I am not an expert on Tyler Perry films—I’ve only seen Diary of a Mad Black Woman and Why Did I Get Married?– but I am a feminist and I was not offended by I Can Do Bad All By Myself. I have not seen all the Madea films because that caricature just turns me off. I saw a Friday matinee of I Can Do Bad All By Myself in Boston. The audience was composed of mostly African-American women. I didn’t see any men and am almost positive I was the only white woman in the crowd. I’m not surprised. I’ve read that Tyler Perry’s demographic is African-American women over 30.
In her article “Tyler Perry’s Gender Problem” in The Nation, Courtney Young wrote: “Though Perry repeatedly references his admiration for and allegiance to African-American women as a foundation of his work, his portrayal of women of color undermines the complexity of their experience through his reductionist approach to the characters and his dependence on disquieting gender politics. Perry may see himself as crating modern-day fairy tales for black women, but what he may not realize is that fairy tales, in general, have never been kind to women.“
I agree with Young about women and fairy tales. There rarely is a happily ever after if you look beyond the sparkles, roses, and gowns. I disagree that I Can Do Bad All By Myself is an example of a fairy tale masquerading as another Tyler Perry film. It’s moving and effective. It focuses on a singer who is in a really bad place [and can’t at least a few people relate to this? I certainly could and so could apparently more than a few vocal audience members].
April [Taraji P. Henson], a nightclub singer, has fallen into a comfortable lifestyle with her abusive married boyfriend [Brian J. White] who supplements her income. She’s unmotivated to make life changes; she’s rather selfish and isolated from family and friends. Okay, so the woman needs much better self-esteem. It will either come to her or it won’t. She will realize that she herself can do it on her own at some point or she will self-destruct because the way she downs alcohol she is on her way down that road. Madea [Tyler Perry] catches 16-year-old Jennifer [a very talented Hope Wilson] and her two brothers breaking into her home, she brings them to the house of their Aunt April, who is not happy to see them. April soon finds out that her mother has died and these kids have no one else.
Yes, there’s another man in the picture: a cute handyman named Sandino [CSI Miami’s Adam Rodriguez] but he’s not there to sweep her off her feet. He’s just perhaps going to nudge her along a bit. He’s wonderful with children and has that easy-going, Zen nature. To think that she will improve her life solely due to the influences of a man is completely insulting to audiences. Relationships can help augment someone’s life but for anyone to think that April would not have decided what to do with her niece and nephews on her own time without meeting Sandino is downright insulting to April. She’s a strong woman who’s made some mistakes in the past. Henson is bold, and emotional in every scene. She acts with her eyes. Those wide, brown eyes are the windows into every emotion April feels. It works and she turns in a commanding, near tear-jerking performance in I Can Do Bad All By Myself. That Madea shows up ended up being okay because her scenes were few and far between and remarkably toned down. There was just enough Madea to provide comic relief from the seriousness at hand and not enough to engulf the audience in her absurdity.

















































