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‘The Color Purple’ review: Musical adaptation soars thanks to its drama

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As toe-tapping and soul-stirring as it often is, the music of the musical film version of “The Color Purple” hitting theaters on Christmas Day isn’t the reason to see it.

See it because it’s “The Color Purple.”

Based on the stage musical that made its Broadway debut in 2005, the new movie is — like the acclaimed 1985 film directed by Steven Spielberg — an adaptation of Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize- and National Book Award for Fiction-winning novel.

Walker’s narrative about the often heartbreaking struggles of a group of Black women living in the American South early in the 20th century remains so powerful, so engrossing, that you sometimes find yourself waiting for a number to end so you can get back to the drama.

That is meant not as a slight to work of the writers of the stage show’s music and lyrics — Brenda Russell, Allee Willis and Stephen Bray, who along with book writer Marsha Norman are counted among the film’s producers — but as praise of the direction of Blitz Bazawule, the screenwriting of Marcus Gardley and the captivating work of the talented cast.

Those performers include Taraji P. Henson (“Empire,” “Hustle & Flow”) and Danielle Brooks (“Orange Is the New Black”), who reprise roles they inhabited on Broadway; former “American Idol” winner Fantasia Barrino; and Colman Domingo, who earned praise recently for his performance in the titular role of the film “Rustin.”

We first meet the younger version of the character portrayed by Barrino, Celie (Phylicia Pearl Mpas in her feature film debut), and her sister, Nettie (“The Little Mermaid” star Halle Bailey), in 1909 Georgia. They happily sing a song before church, where they and their father, Alfonso (Deon Cole), sit among many other Black townsfolk.

Phylicia Pearl Mpas, left, as young Celie, and Halle Bailey, as young Nettie, appear in a scene from "The Color Purple." (Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)
Phylicia Pearl Mpas, left, as young Celie, and Halle Bailey, as young Nettie, appear in a scene from “The Color Purple.” (Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)

Soon after that, however, that happiness is threatened when Alfonso promises Celie to Domingo’s Mister, who initially had his eye on Nettie and whom Nettie refers to as the “devil.”

“You can get to cleaning,” Mister informs Celie upon her arrival at his home. “Then fix supper.”

She quickly is introduced to an existence characterized by Mister’s anger and beatings.

Colman Domingo portrays the hate-filled Mister in "The Color Purple." (Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)
Colman Domingo portrays the hate-filled Mister in “The Color Purple.” (Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)

As the years pass, we spend time with other memorable characters, including Mister’s now-grown son Harpo (Corey Hawkins), whose marriage to Brooks’ speaks-her-mind and stands-her-ground Sofia displeases Mister.

More important to the story is the return to town of popular singer Shug Avery (Henson), with whom Mister long has been smitten. With Shug in Mister’s home, he is in a better mood and thus kinder to Celie. However, it is the direct effect Shug has on the abused woman that is most crucial to Celie’s arc.

Taraji P. Henson, left, and Fantasia Barrino perform in an inventively staged musical number in "The Color Purple." (Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)
Taraji P. Henson, left, and Fantasia Barrino perform in an inventively staged musical number in “The Color Purple.” (Courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures)

With Walker’s tale growing more emotionally charged as it progresses and the Ghanaian multimedia artist Bazawule — a Kent State University graduate whose credits include making 2018’s “The Burial of Kojo” and co-directing Beyonce’s “Black Is King” — delivering enthralling scene after enthralling scene, we can’t help but wonder if we wouldn’t have preferred a straight remake from him.

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