IMDb रेटिंग
6.2/10
5.1 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंFollows the lives of the Charles family as they deal with themes of family legacy and more, in deciding what to do with an heirloom, the family piano.Follows the lives of the Charles family as they deal with themes of family legacy and more, in deciding what to do with an heirloom, the family piano.Follows the lives of the Charles family as they deal with themes of family legacy and more, in deciding what to do with an heirloom, the family piano.
- निर्देशक
- लेखक
- स्टार
- पुरस्कार
- 26 जीत और कुल 57 नामांकन
Malik J Ali
- Willie Boy
- (as Malik J. Ali)
Eilan Joseph
- Papa Boy Walter
- (as Hanniel Joseph)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
The Piano Lesson, delves into the lives of a Black family grappling with their history during a time marked by oppression and loss. The story focuses on Bernice (Danielle Deadwyler) and her daughter, who live with her uncle Doaker (Samuel L. Jackson). The plot unfolds as Bernice's brother, Boy Willie (John David Washington), visits, and we gradually uncover the family's past, including the mystery of Bernice's late husband and the deep significance of their treasured piano.
The film explores weighty themes such as Black slavery, grief, guilt, single motherhood, and moral dilemmas. Adapted from August Wilson's play, part of his celebrated Pittsburgh Cycle (which also includes Fences and Ma Rainey's Black Bottom), the movie carries a similar pacing and tone, though it feels closer to Fences in structure.
Danielle Deadwyler delivers an outstanding performance, portraying Bernice with emotional depth and nuance. She is undoubtedly a rising star, evoking comparisons to Viola Davis. Her performance deserves serious awards consideration. By contrast, I found John David Washington's portrayal of Boy Willie overacted, making it harder to connect with his character. Samuel L. Jackson and Ray Fisher (as Lymon) brought solid supporting performances, grounding the narrative effectively.
The cinematography and direction were immersive, giving the house and the piano a lived-in, almost iconic feel. The dialogue is beautifully written, seamlessly weaving past and present. While I found the ending slightly overdone, the film's overall impact remains strong.
I would rate The Piano Lesson a 7/10-higher than Ma Rainey's Black Bottom but slightly behind Fences. Danielle Deadwyler's performance alone makes this film worth watching, and the music and writing are nothing short of masterful.
The film explores weighty themes such as Black slavery, grief, guilt, single motherhood, and moral dilemmas. Adapted from August Wilson's play, part of his celebrated Pittsburgh Cycle (which also includes Fences and Ma Rainey's Black Bottom), the movie carries a similar pacing and tone, though it feels closer to Fences in structure.
Danielle Deadwyler delivers an outstanding performance, portraying Bernice with emotional depth and nuance. She is undoubtedly a rising star, evoking comparisons to Viola Davis. Her performance deserves serious awards consideration. By contrast, I found John David Washington's portrayal of Boy Willie overacted, making it harder to connect with his character. Samuel L. Jackson and Ray Fisher (as Lymon) brought solid supporting performances, grounding the narrative effectively.
The cinematography and direction were immersive, giving the house and the piano a lived-in, almost iconic feel. The dialogue is beautifully written, seamlessly weaving past and present. While I found the ending slightly overdone, the film's overall impact remains strong.
I would rate The Piano Lesson a 7/10-higher than Ma Rainey's Black Bottom but slightly behind Fences. Danielle Deadwyler's performance alone makes this film worth watching, and the music and writing are nothing short of masterful.
My wife and I watched this at home, streaming. While it is a well-made movie and covers an interesting topic, we didn't find it very enjoyable. It is a movie adaptation of a stage play and it comes across that way, with loud dialog and broad gestures, with limited settings.
It is a Washington family project, Denzel is a producer, one of his sons is the director, another son stars as Boy Willie, and his wife also has a small role.
Samuel L. Jackson is in it but his role as uncle Doaker could have been played by anyone. John David Washington is Boy Willie, he is brash and angry all the way through and after a while I found him hard to watch. Danielle Deadwyler is really good as his sister Berniece. But she is unhappy the whole time because of the bombardment by her brother.
The gist is this, as we see in an opening scene from 1911 in Mississippi when the main characters are children there is a late-night theft of an old upright piano during a celebration event. The piano has sentimental value to the family because of their connection to some wood carvings that adorn the piano. In fact they didn't consider it a theft, they figured they were the rightful owners.
Bernice, now a single mother living in Pittsburgh in 1936, has the piano. However her brother, needing to raise money to try to buy some land back in Mississippi wants to take the piano and sell it. He doesn't make a request, he drives to Pittsburgh with a truckload of watermelons to sell along the way and expects to just take the piano. This creates the discord between the siblings.
The title may lead us to believe it involves piano lessons in the usual way, music instruction, but it isn't. It refers to the lessons a family learns with the piano as a central figure.
It is a Washington family project, Denzel is a producer, one of his sons is the director, another son stars as Boy Willie, and his wife also has a small role.
Samuel L. Jackson is in it but his role as uncle Doaker could have been played by anyone. John David Washington is Boy Willie, he is brash and angry all the way through and after a while I found him hard to watch. Danielle Deadwyler is really good as his sister Berniece. But she is unhappy the whole time because of the bombardment by her brother.
The gist is this, as we see in an opening scene from 1911 in Mississippi when the main characters are children there is a late-night theft of an old upright piano during a celebration event. The piano has sentimental value to the family because of their connection to some wood carvings that adorn the piano. In fact they didn't consider it a theft, they figured they were the rightful owners.
Bernice, now a single mother living in Pittsburgh in 1936, has the piano. However her brother, needing to raise money to try to buy some land back in Mississippi wants to take the piano and sell it. He doesn't make a request, he drives to Pittsburgh with a truckload of watermelons to sell along the way and expects to just take the piano. This creates the discord between the siblings.
The title may lead us to believe it involves piano lessons in the usual way, music instruction, but it isn't. It refers to the lessons a family learns with the piano as a central figure.
August Wilson's work has been an important part of theater work in the Black Communities. Achieving many themes and style approaches that other plays haven't approached before hand.
With the Piano Lesson, while not perfect, it still remains an intense dialogue-filled journey. Throughout, the ambitious direction and atmosphere of The Piano Lesson is successful with it's narrative setting and ground. Exploring themes of slavery, trauma, horror, and Black American society that are interesting. With solid camerawork, production designs, and strong performances from the entire cast, especially Danielle Deadwyler whom I believe will get more recognition in the near future.
The narrative, although it feels a bit long and dragged on some components, it achieves as it's characters and good dialogue moments are investing and engaging. The presentation color is a bit dull, some of the pacing was a bit too dry, and the worst aspect was the musical score, the score felt overdramatic and at times, ruined some of the best scenes that could have been a bit more impactful.
Overall, I do recommend it for those who love August Wilson.
With the Piano Lesson, while not perfect, it still remains an intense dialogue-filled journey. Throughout, the ambitious direction and atmosphere of The Piano Lesson is successful with it's narrative setting and ground. Exploring themes of slavery, trauma, horror, and Black American society that are interesting. With solid camerawork, production designs, and strong performances from the entire cast, especially Danielle Deadwyler whom I believe will get more recognition in the near future.
The narrative, although it feels a bit long and dragged on some components, it achieves as it's characters and good dialogue moments are investing and engaging. The presentation color is a bit dull, some of the pacing was a bit too dry, and the worst aspect was the musical score, the score felt overdramatic and at times, ruined some of the best scenes that could have been a bit more impactful.
Overall, I do recommend it for those who love August Wilson.
It reminds me "Fences" - another Washington production with Washington in the leading role. I guess it is me and my taste, because in that experience and on this current, the results were the same. Big appreciation to the leading actors, but not less boredom, due to the content.
This time it is based on a play by August Wilson, and it definitely feels like an adaptation for a play. The actors are gathered in one location for most of the movie's runtime and most of the time they are talking with one other, until the end of the film, which takes a wild twist for different types of genre.
One of the most interesting themes of this movie is the Washingtons. Malcolm Washington is the director, John David Washington is one of the main characters and of course Papa Denzel is one of the producers. Not enough? Sister Olivia Washington and Mama Pauletta are both in minor parts of the cast.
John David has upgraded his level of acting in this one. He is like fire and also has dynamite dynamic and chemistry with Danielle Deadwyler, which proves once again that she is one of the best and underrated actresses in Hollywood of these days.
A small surprise in a very good role is Ray Fisher, that everyone knows as Cyborg. And Sam Jackson will be Sam Jackson. Marvellous as always. He is not a main character but contributes in his own special way without stealing the thunder of both main characters.
The story revolves around two siblings that meet after a lot of time they didn't meet and have an argument about selling or keeping a nostalgic Piano. No piano lessons will be learned with any piano teacher. However, lessons from this piano's history will be taught by the pound and those two will verbally brawl, until spilling out all the bad blood between them and their ancestors.
That takes us to the pace and rhythm of this movie. Seems that even the actors' abilities cannot prevent the audience from the desire to set their heads on the couch and go to sleep, throughout some major parts of the movie. Maybe as a theatre show it would be much more successful, but for cinema and especially home cinema, it doesn't work so well.
This time it is based on a play by August Wilson, and it definitely feels like an adaptation for a play. The actors are gathered in one location for most of the movie's runtime and most of the time they are talking with one other, until the end of the film, which takes a wild twist for different types of genre.
One of the most interesting themes of this movie is the Washingtons. Malcolm Washington is the director, John David Washington is one of the main characters and of course Papa Denzel is one of the producers. Not enough? Sister Olivia Washington and Mama Pauletta are both in minor parts of the cast.
John David has upgraded his level of acting in this one. He is like fire and also has dynamite dynamic and chemistry with Danielle Deadwyler, which proves once again that she is one of the best and underrated actresses in Hollywood of these days.
A small surprise in a very good role is Ray Fisher, that everyone knows as Cyborg. And Sam Jackson will be Sam Jackson. Marvellous as always. He is not a main character but contributes in his own special way without stealing the thunder of both main characters.
The story revolves around two siblings that meet after a lot of time they didn't meet and have an argument about selling or keeping a nostalgic Piano. No piano lessons will be learned with any piano teacher. However, lessons from this piano's history will be taught by the pound and those two will verbally brawl, until spilling out all the bad blood between them and their ancestors.
That takes us to the pace and rhythm of this movie. Seems that even the actors' abilities cannot prevent the audience from the desire to set their heads on the couch and go to sleep, throughout some major parts of the movie. Maybe as a theatre show it would be much more successful, but for cinema and especially home cinema, it doesn't work so well.
Rating - 6.8:
Overall, a film very similar to other August Wilson works, as it uses authentic dialogue and good acting, especially from Danielle Deadwyler, to tell a profound story; but the movie is held back by its amateur filmmaking and inconsistent tone.
Direction - Pretty Bad: The direction on a macroscale feels very amateur and not that well executed; the direction on a microscale is fine as it mimics other August Wilson movies in that it allows the actors to act with minimal intervention, similar to a play; the storytelling is a bit muddy as they did not know what tone they wanted to go with throughout the movie; tension is not built that well because they try to force this horror, ghost story that is not that well executed
Story - Decent: The concept deviates from the original play and makes the movie an unnecessary supernatural ghost story, which kind of hurts the story dealing with the generational trauma from their ancestors; the plot structure is nothing special; the character writing is not that great because they keep introducing many characters and do not do a good job providing them backstory to make you root for them, except for maybe Deadwyler's character
Screenplay - Good: The dialogue is very authentic to the source material and other August Wilson works; the humor is pretty true to other August Wilson works; the symbolism is profound as the whole movie deals with generational trauma this family has dealt with from slavery and racism; the foreshadowing is present but kinda expected
Acting - Pretty Good to Good: Samuel L. Jackson - Good (Feels like he pulls a lot from his experience as an actor in this role, but he does not feel like he is used as much as he should have been), John David Washington - Pretty Good to Good (Plays the lead role decently well, as this character feels like it plays to his strengths as an actor), Ray Fisher - Pretty Bad (Really feels off in comparison to the rest of the cat as his comedic humor feels very forced), Michael Potts - Pretty Good to Good, Erykah Badu - Pretty Good, Skylar Aleece Smith - Pretty Good, Danielle Deadwyler - Very Good (Steals the show in all her scenes as she shows a wide range of emotions and accurately displays a mother trying to hold onto her family and ancestry), Corey Hawkins - Good (Plays his role well and has good chemistry with Deadwyler), Rest of the cast - Pretty Good to Good (The cast as a whole works well together; it was evident that the director let the actors act in a way similar to the play)
Score - Decent: Used decently well throughout the movie; for a movie called 'The Piano Lesson' it would have been great to have at least heard one piano motif throughout the movie, so not having this feels like a wasted opportunity
Cinematography - Pretty Bad: Felt pretty amateur and not that well executed, especailly in the climax
Editing - Pretty Bad: Felt pretty amateur
Sound - Pretty Good: Helps enhance those horror elements
Visual Effects - Pretty Bad: Felt pretty tacky
Production Design - Good: Felt authentic to the time period
Costumes - Good: Felt authentic to the time period
Pacing - Pacing is pretty slow as it tries to mimic the play's pacing
Climax - Climax is chaotic and poorly executed; the ending felt very anticlimactic
Tone - Tone is a big issue for this movie because there never felt like there was a consistent tone as they tried to make this movie both a historical drama and a ghost story; they tried to do a lot of things and couldn't do any of them well
Final Notes - Saw premiere at the Austin Film Festival.
Direction - Pretty Bad: The direction on a macroscale feels very amateur and not that well executed; the direction on a microscale is fine as it mimics other August Wilson movies in that it allows the actors to act with minimal intervention, similar to a play; the storytelling is a bit muddy as they did not know what tone they wanted to go with throughout the movie; tension is not built that well because they try to force this horror, ghost story that is not that well executed
Story - Decent: The concept deviates from the original play and makes the movie an unnecessary supernatural ghost story, which kind of hurts the story dealing with the generational trauma from their ancestors; the plot structure is nothing special; the character writing is not that great because they keep introducing many characters and do not do a good job providing them backstory to make you root for them, except for maybe Deadwyler's character
Screenplay - Good: The dialogue is very authentic to the source material and other August Wilson works; the humor is pretty true to other August Wilson works; the symbolism is profound as the whole movie deals with generational trauma this family has dealt with from slavery and racism; the foreshadowing is present but kinda expected
Acting - Pretty Good to Good: Samuel L. Jackson - Good (Feels like he pulls a lot from his experience as an actor in this role, but he does not feel like he is used as much as he should have been), John David Washington - Pretty Good to Good (Plays the lead role decently well, as this character feels like it plays to his strengths as an actor), Ray Fisher - Pretty Bad (Really feels off in comparison to the rest of the cat as his comedic humor feels very forced), Michael Potts - Pretty Good to Good, Erykah Badu - Pretty Good, Skylar Aleece Smith - Pretty Good, Danielle Deadwyler - Very Good (Steals the show in all her scenes as she shows a wide range of emotions and accurately displays a mother trying to hold onto her family and ancestry), Corey Hawkins - Good (Plays his role well and has good chemistry with Deadwyler), Rest of the cast - Pretty Good to Good (The cast as a whole works well together; it was evident that the director let the actors act in a way similar to the play)
Score - Decent: Used decently well throughout the movie; for a movie called 'The Piano Lesson' it would have been great to have at least heard one piano motif throughout the movie, so not having this feels like a wasted opportunity
Cinematography - Pretty Bad: Felt pretty amateur and not that well executed, especailly in the climax
Editing - Pretty Bad: Felt pretty amateur
Sound - Pretty Good: Helps enhance those horror elements
Visual Effects - Pretty Bad: Felt pretty tacky
Production Design - Good: Felt authentic to the time period
Costumes - Good: Felt authentic to the time period
Pacing - Pacing is pretty slow as it tries to mimic the play's pacing
Climax - Climax is chaotic and poorly executed; the ending felt very anticlimactic
Tone - Tone is a big issue for this movie because there never felt like there was a consistent tone as they tried to make this movie both a historical drama and a ghost story; they tried to do a lot of things and couldn't do any of them well
Final Notes - Saw premiere at the Austin Film Festival.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाSamuel L. Jackson, John David Washington, Ray Fisher, and Michael Potts all starred together in the Broadway production of The Piano Lesson from 2022-2023.
- गूफ़When Boy Willie is talking about his plans, at one point Doaker places his right hand in front of his chin and the left on the table. However, on the next immediate cut, he has both hands on the table with fingers interlaced.
- भाव
[first lines]
Boy Charles: Hey, son. You remember how to whistle?
Young Boy Willie: Yes. sir.
Boy Charles: All right. You see anybody coming, I need you to whistle. You understand?
Young Boy Willie: Yes. sir.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in The 31st Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards (2025)
- साउंडट्रैकWashington Post 2
Written by John Philip Sousa
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is The Piano Lesson?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
- चलने की अवधि2 घंटे 7 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.85 : 1
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किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें