Emayatzy Corinealdi |
By my reckoning there were at least two lines: one for ticket holders and the other for all-access pass holders. I was told I could get on the latter with my press pass, so I did, but the lines were malformed and spread out over a great deal of limited space. Then we had to wait. And wait. And wait. Show time was eight PM, but we went well past that, and some people on my line were getting ticked off. The woman in front of me (who claimed to be from HBO) went up front to investigate, and she was told that the film arrived late and director Ava DuVernay was running a sound check. Arrived late? Really?
Everyone REALLY wanted to see 'Nowhere.' |
I ended up sitting in the second row, which was great for taking pictures afterwards at the Q-and-A, but not so much for watching the film - especially this film, which has a whole lot of close-ups, so not only could I see every pore, hair and blemish on the actors' faces, but I felt like I was looking up their noses as well!
Corinealdi, right, with director Ava DuVernay at the Q-and-A |
Nowhere is about a woman who struggles to help her imprisoned husband get released early. At the same time, she's being pursued by a different man. Visually, this looks quite different from DuVernay's previous film, I Will Follow. Her DP was Bradford Young, who worked on the breathtaking Restless City and other films that played Urbanworld in the past, and also Pariah. He gives Nowhere an artier feel than Follow. Remember his name; I firmly believe this is only the beginning for him.
L-R: DuVernay, Corinealdi, producer Paul Garnes, and DP Bradford Young |
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Previously:
Being Mary Jane
Dar He: The Lynching of Emmett Till
Won't Back Down
Soul Food Junkies
The Last Fall
I wasn't late. Thanks for giving it another chance. And sorry you had a wack experience. Ever onward, Ava DuVernay
ReplyDeleteI meant the film, not you. Sorry if that was unclear.
ReplyDeleteThanks for responding, though. I'll definitely write about the film again.