Cadillac Records
Adrien Brody Actor , Jeffrey Wright Actor , Gabrielle Union Actor , Beyoncé Knowles Actor , Columbus Short Actor
MPAA Rating:
R
Contains:Profanity,Sexual Situations
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Cadillac Records
Theatrical Release Date: 2008 12 05 (USA) / 2008 (USA)
UPC: 043396294660
Studio: Sony Pictures
MPAA Rating: R Contains:[Profanity, Sexual Situations]
Summary: Directed by TV veteran Darnell Martin, the musical drama Cadillac Records documents the compelling true-life story of the Chicago record label that helped the world discover such legendary artists as Muddy Waters, Howlin' Wolf, Little Walter, and Chuck Berry. Founded in 1950 by Leonard Chess (Adrien Brody), Chess Records quickly gained a reputation as home to some of the most talented and influential blues artists ever to step into a recording studio. But giving these musicians an opportunity to bring their music to the world was no easy task, because along the way there was enough sex, drugs, and rock & roll to ensure that things around Chess Records never got boring. Featuring Jeffrey Wright as Muddy Waters, Gabrielle Union as Geneva Wade, Beyonc? Knowles as Etta James, Mos Def as Chuck Berry, Cedric the Entertainer as Willie Dixon, and Eamonn Walker as Howlin' Wolf. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Drama
Awards: Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Music – Women Film Critics Circle
Features:
cc
Deleted scenes
"Playing Chess: The Making of Cadillac Records"
"Once Upon a Blues: Cadillac Records by Design"
Commentary with writer/director Darnell Martin
Cadillac Records
Format: Digital Video Disc (DVD)
Release Date: 03/10/2009
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Cinemascope
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, DDS Dolby Digital Surround
Runtime: 109 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English,French
Subtitles: English,French
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- Cadillac Records
1. Chapter 1 [4:59]
2. Chapter 2 [2:15]
3. Chapter 3 [2:22]
4. Chapter 4 [4:25]
5. Chapter 5 [3:24]
6. Chapter 6 [2:46]
7. Chapter 7 [2:34]
8. Chapter 8 [2:25]
9. Chapter 9 [3:02]
10. Chapter 10 [2:41]
11. Chapter 11 [3:51]
12. Chapter 12 [2:04]
13. Chapter 13 [3:36]
14. Chapter 14 [4:22]
15. Chapter 15 [2:38]
16. Chapter 16 [4:53]
17. Chapter 17 [2:17]
18. Chapter 18 [3:28]
19. Chapter 19 [3:10]
20. Chapter 20 [4:44]
21. Chapter 21 [5:01]
22. Chapter 22 [2:11]
23. Chapter 23 [3:15]
24. Chapter 24 [3:04]
25. Chapter 25 [5:28]
26. Chapter 26 [1:44]
27. Chapter 27 [8:19]
28. Chapter 28 [6:04]
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Any one of the seven main characters featured in writer/director Darnell Martin's 2008 blues-biopic Cadillac Records could have garnered their own film. The life of rock & roll icon Chuck Berry alone, played here by the charmingly sly and underutilized Mos Def, includes enough musical innovation and run-ins with the law to fill several cinematic installments. Instead, Martin chooses to detail the rise to prominence of the legendary Chicago-based Chess Records label founded in 1950 by producer Leonard Chess (Adrien Brody) and featuring his roster of influential blues artists, including guitarist/vocalist Muddy Waters (Jeffrey Wright), harmonica player Little Walter (Columbus Short), guitarist/vocalist Howlin' Wolf (Eamonn Walker), and singer Etta James (Beyonc? Knowles). The story, told through voice-over narration from Cedric the Entertainer in an understated and folksy performance as Chess bassist and musical mastermind Willie Dixon, begins in the '40s and is a basic American dream fable in which Chess, a Polish immigrant, goes from being a bar owner and record label huckster to one of the first rock & roll impresarios. At the same time, Dixon tells us how Waters, discovered by musicologist Alan Lomax on a plantation in Mississippi, goes from being an acoustic country bumpkin to an urban guitar-slinger. Eventually, Chess and Waters cross paths, pay off several disc jockeys to get the records they record played on the radio, and use their earnings to open the Chess Records studio. The rest is musical history as we see how the success of other Chess artists like Chuck Berry helped integrate the segregated music audiences of the '50s, kick starting the rock & roll era. Never mind that Chess founded the label with his brother, a character missing from the film. Never mind that Chess, played with a romantic dewy passion by Brody, was by most accounts a hard ass in business and life who never paid his musicians their fare share of royalties -- a point never made explicit in the film. Never mind that while having crafted a film with a multi-character approach, Martin does not include numerous other influential Chess artists, such as Bo Diddley, Gene Ammons, Buddy Guy, and Otis Rush, just to name a few. Never mind, because any in-the-know blues aficionado will find Cadillac Records -- named after Chess' penchant for giving Cadillac cars to his musicians instead of actually paying them -- a historically suspect picture of the Chess Records legend. We never get a real sense of what made these recordings so different or revolutionary. Part of the problem is that re-recorded versions of songs by the actors were used in the film, with vastly mixed results that never match the ferocity and excitement of the original tracks. Also, although Martin doesn't give a sanitized view of these hard-living, often cruel individuals, her script feels underwritten and so basic that the actors often seem to be mugging and hamming it up on-screen just to fill up the dead air. Rather than real characters, we get a shoddy series of bad wigs, cheesy aging makeup, and an uneven tone that wobbles between light humor and awkward vulgarity. Surely many blues musicians of the '40s, '50s, and '60s were also boozers, womanizers, and violent criminals, but, as the film has too many individuals to deal with, we never get more than a thumbnail sketch of their personal lives. As a result, such broad characterizations seem more like negative stereotypes of blues musicians rather than the actual people. At one point, after an extended and hedonistic performance montage, a drunken Waters returns home to see his heretofore not pregnant wife sitting on the bed with a child in her lap. Obviously dumbfounded, Waters, as if voicing our confusion, remarks, "Where'd that baby come from?" Similarly confusing is how Chess could record such unconventional and raw talents who played loudly over each other and moved about while recording in the studio. Purportedly, Chess simply cut out a lot of musician's tracks without telling them -- an unethical move not even hinted at here. Rather, we get Chess dismissing such concerns to his sound man with a tossed off, "Don't worry about it." Then there is the blinding specter of Beyonc? Knowles, who undoubtedly hoped to have finally landed the Oscar-winning role she must have felt escaped her in the 2006 musical Dreamgirls. As the haughty, soulful James, Knowles lays it on almost as thick as her garish green eyeliner and peroxide blonde wig. It's a bad performance made worse as the film shudders to a halt for several extended and static in-studio musical sequences obviously intended for fans who've only shown up to see Beyonc?. There are also several cringe-inducing Oscar-bait monologues stemming from James' issues over having had a prostitute for a mother and pool shark Minnesota Fats for an absentee father that will do little to endear Knowles to the Academy. One can only wonder what her fans will make of her pre-coital, post-heroin overdose love scene with Brody. In the scene, Chess attempts to talk some sense into a strung-out James, who is on the verge of getting her house repossessed. Chess comes on sexually to James and offers to put her house in his name so she won't lose it. If the scene works at all, it's only because, as it may be an attempt by Martin to show how Chess took advantage of people during their weak moments, it comes off as creepy and opportunistic. Ultimately, much the same can be said for the film. ~ All Movie Guide
Cast and Crew:
Darnell Martin
Director
Darnell Martin
Screenwriter
Terence Blanchard
Composer (Music Score)
Marc Levin
Executive Producer
Andrew Lack
Producer
Beyoncé Knowles
Executive Producer
Sofia Sondervan
Producer
Adrien Brody
Actor
Jeffrey Wright
Actor
Gabrielle Union
Actor
Beyoncé Knowles
Actor
Columbus Short
Actor
Mos Def
Actor
Cedric the Entertainer
Actor
Emmanuelle Chriqui
Actor
Eamonn Walker
Actor
Tammy Blanchard
Actor
Shiloh Fernandez
Actor
Country: USA











