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IMDbPro

Bless Their Little Hearts

  • 1983
  • 1h 20min
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
7,2/10
607
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Nate Hardman in Bless Their Little Hearts (1983)
A dramatic look into the life of a family in Watts.
Riproduci trailer2:05
1 video
12 foto
Dramma

Aggiungi una trama nella tua linguaA dramatic look into the life of a family in Watts.A dramatic look into the life of a family in Watts.A dramatic look into the life of a family in Watts.

  • Regia
    • Billy Woodberry
  • Sceneggiatura
    • Charles Burnett
  • Star
    • Nate Hardman
    • Kaycee Moore
    • Angela Burnett
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
  • VALUTAZIONE IMDb
    7,2/10
    607
    LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
    • Regia
      • Billy Woodberry
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Charles Burnett
    • Star
      • Nate Hardman
      • Kaycee Moore
      • Angela Burnett
    • 8Recensioni degli utenti
    • 10Recensioni della critica
  • Vedi le informazioni sulla produzione su IMDbPro
    • Premi
      • 4 vittorie totali

    Video1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:05
    Official Trailer

    Foto12

    Visualizza poster
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    + 6
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    Interpreti principali10

    Modifica
    Nate Hardman
    • Charlie Banks
    Kaycee Moore
    Kaycee Moore
    • Andais Banks
    Angela Burnett
    Angela Burnett
    • Banks Child
    Ronald Burnett
    • Banks Child
    Kimberly Burnett
    • Banks Child
    Langston Woodberry
    • Mistresses' son
    Eugene Cherry
    Ellis Griffin
    Ernest Knight
    Lawrence Pierott
    • Regia
      • Billy Woodberry
    • Sceneggiatura
      • Charles Burnett
    • Tutti gli interpreti e le troupe
    • Produzione, botteghino e altro su IMDbPro

    Recensioni degli utenti8

    7,2607
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    Recensioni in evidenza

    8gbill-74877

    Wonderful little film

    "Well if you can see what I'm going through, why are doing this to me?"

    This is a rather somber film about a black family in Los Angeles struggling because the father can't find steady work, and it succeeds because of its simple honesty and realism. It doesn't rely on plot devices aimed at garnering pity, and it doesn't create needless melodrama. We simply see these characters for who they are, a man with a growing sense of emasculation by the world, and his wife who is struggling to do everything around the house with their kids and keep the family afloat. Things come to head when she realizes that he's been seeing an old girlfriend, and not bringing all of the money he does earn home to his family.

    The 9-minute argument the two have in the kitchen at that point is easily the highlight of the film. Kaycee Moore is simply fantastic in this scene, and is such a natural at channeling the frustrations and anger of her character. It's a performance that I wish was more widely known and recognized ("I'm tired!"). It's also wonderful that we see quite a bit of her character's point of view in this film, as someone who works, cleans the house, manages the finances, and is as supportive as possible to her husband.

    Nate Hardman is also solid as the husband, and it's to the film's credit that he's not a completely virtuous character and we have conflicting feelings about him. In addition to the big moments, we see how small frustrations and the economic pressure boil over in his relationship with his kids and wife. The supporting performances are quite as good as well, most notably the uncredited barber who gives him pragmatic advice about getting a job, which felt completely authentic. The direction from Billy Woodberry in what was his master's thesis at UCLA (wow!) is wonderfully restrained, and it's a damn shame that he had so few opportunities after this debut.
    7CinemaSerf

    Bless Their Little Hearts

    There's an almost documentary feel to this short drama that follows the "Banks" family who are struggling to make ends meet. That's basically because husband/father "Charlie" (Nate Hardman) is habitually unemployed. This puts the strains on his wife "Andais" (Kaycee Moore) and their relationship whilst he imposes a very strict, masculine, discipline on their three children. There is a real paucity of dialogue in this as the intimately photographed imagery is left to show us the relentless mundanity of their lives. "Charlie" is not a nasty or violent man, but he is set in his ways and has no intention of straying from his own path - however inconsistent that may be with would be employers or his children who are, slowly but surely, beginning to show traits of adulthood and choice that he doesn't especially like. He is also not averse to playing on the other side of the blanket. There's a complex relationship going on here between the couple and Moore plays her part strongly. "Andais" is frustrated and disappointed with their lot in life, but is stoic enough to lose her temper but occasionally with a "Charlie" that she clearly loves, but finds exasperating at times. It's an observation of a snippet from their timeline. We join mid-flow and we leave in a similarly inconclusive fashion which, again, adds some realism to this depiction of life for an African American man whose predicaments and options are exclusively made on what he sees are his own terms.
    8dmgrundy

    Nobody knows you when you're down and out

    A landmark film, formally and emotionally pitch-perfect, deceptively modest yet a small-scale domestic study with far wider ramifications, 'Bless their Little Hearts' has deliberately little in the way of plot. We witness Charlie Banks (Nate Hardman) in what appears to be a long-standing routine of unemployment and piece work, the tensions in his marriage to Andais (Kaycee Moore), and the way both parents take out their frustrations on their children. (A particularly painful scene has Charlie castigate his son for not trimming his nails and appearing like a 'girl' or 'sissy'). There's little narrative 'progression' per se: Charlie takes up bits of piece-work (scything grass, painting over Crips graffiti), conducts an extra-marital affair. A lengthy fight with Andais over the affair might, in another film, have been a central or event climactic point. Here, within a matter of scenes, Charlie's back at home, the incident apparently forgotten or at least not talked about, and the routine begins again. Taking up his fishing rod--a memorable scene sees him unpicking the tangled threads when he can't sleep at night--it seems that he's taken up fishing as an attempt to recapture the past, to find some sort of solace. But it turns out that he and his friends are engaging in a money-making scheme, trying to sell fish at roadside to drivers in passing cars. Charlie sits off to the side, smoking and staring off-camera, before walking away from the group towards distance houses: as in the opening scenes, where he wanders home from the welfare office via the railroad tracks, his walk is both purposeful and purposeless, heading somewhere but with no particular place to go. And there the film simply ends.

    Woodberry has described the film as "just blues and Brecht". As a write-up for a showing of the film at BAMPFA notes, this is more than just a simple put-down: Woodberry shares with Brecht an emphasis on the gestus, "the seemingly insignificant action that crystallizes for the spectator a whole complex of social relations." If the perpetual condition of unemployment can barely be analysed in the structural terms that produce it, except for the gendered stereotypes of emasculation, of failing to live up to ideals of 'manhood' present in Charlie's quarrels with Andaice and with his mistress, almost every gesture in the film gives testimony to the way these lives are shaped by broader conditions of racialised precarity perhaps the more eloquent for being never directly stated. A scene in which Charlie and his friends go through alternatives to piece-work and unemployment see Charlie reject turning to robbery, not for moral reasons, but because he has a family and a jail term would take him away from them. There's at once a hardened realism, a totally clear-eyed ability to see through the moralistic and hypocritical lies fostered by white supremacist society and a near-fatalistic inability to see an altnerative. When Charlie rides past the ruins of a factory, eloquent testimony to the ravages of deindustrialisation--a scene which memorably plays in the LA Rebellion section of Thom Andersen's 'Los Angeles Plays it Itself'--we're witnessing both broader, contextual illustration and explanation for the entire social situation we've witnessed in claustrophobic miniature throughout, and the near-incidental detail that simply passes the protagonist by on a car-ride home from day labouring, all with no words or externally-imposed explanatory detail. Such a scene is typical of the way the film at once allegorizes and refuses to give up the particularity of the lives we witness on screen. The characters are not heroic exemplars; they are not card-board cut outs; they are not existentialist heroes; they are not objects of pity or scorn one level down from the spectator; they simply are. As in Charles Burnett's 'Killer of Sheep', the film it most closely resembles (Burnett indeed wrote the script and served as cinematographer), music serves the function of the Brechtian chorus, interrupting the action more than illustrating it; it points up the low level misery we see on screen and it provides consolation. The historical nature of the blues and jazz we hear on screen says more than both words and image. It functions as far more than Hollywood soundtracking for the purposes of background, barely-noticeable filler or manipulative emotional guidepost. But it also differs from the hip use of contemporary song in the new Hollywood (exemplified by the Scorsese-Tarantino lineage). We hear both history and the present, how history repeats itself, both how little and how much has changed. Key instances include the opening scenes of Hardman in the welfare office, set to Archie Shepp's achingly fragile soprano saxophone transmutation of Bessie Smith's voice on 'Nobody knows you when you're down out', from the then-recently released 'Trouble in Mind', his second duo record with pianist Horace Parlan; and Esther Philip's voice playing over Kaycee Moore's bus ride, the camera close up on her face as she struggles to awake from sleep, staring off, as so many characters do in this film, into the middle-distance at nothing in particular. Woodberry never shows us what the characters are thinking or feeling at these moments through hackneyed devices like explicatory dialogue or voiceover. Distance is maintained with the refusal to put words in mouths, bridged by the intimate sadness of the music, specific yet archetypal. Woodberry emphasizes that these songs, too, can be cut short, often breaking them off in the middle of a phrase as the screen fades to black and another scene begins. Interrupter, consolation and expression of the inexpressible, music provides the collective eloquence absent from the characters' lives, and attests to the power of survival that subsides even in the bleak normalisation of misery. Nearly forty years after it was made, with socio-political conditions little changed, such compassionate witness resonates as strongly as ever.
    8mossgrymk

    bless their little hearts

    I join with my three IMDB colleagues (there should be more!) in lauding this 80s LA kitchen sink drama about the corrosive effects of joblessness and poverty on a black family and marriage. Most of the things I like about this gritty, grainy work are covered by the previous reviewers, especially the always cogent gbill-74877. I would add that I admire the choice that director Billy Woodberry and writer/cinematographer Charles Burnett make to depict fecklessness from within rather than racism from without to be the main adversary this embattled family faces. And I would note that Woodberry at thirty four and in his first film shows a compassion toward his characters that many more experienced and older directors should envy.

    Is there a flaw? Unfortunately, yes, and in my opinion it lies within Burnett's screenplay. It is not that the story is too "thin". There is nothing wrong with soft peddling plot to emphasize character, especially when the characters are played by such compelling actors as Kaycee Moore and Nate Hardman (especially the former). However, there is simply too much padding and filler in this film, too many scenes where not much is going on, like Hardman's character shaving and repairing his fishing line, that serve to bring the pace and flow to a thudding halt and that is never, in my view, a good thing.

    Bottom line: Agree with gbill that it's a tragedy equal to the one portrayed in this film that Woodberry did not get to make more movies. Give this one a B plus.
    10tRiVi8L

    the L.A. Rebellion ...

    Woodberry, part of the (UCLA) Film Rebellion movement along with other colleagues such as Julie Dash, constructed this documentary-like saga of life in South Central, L.A. during the early `80s. Showing an uncommon (especially at the time) subject through an avant-garde/foreign (brazilian and cuban) style comes off grandly as part of the Rebellion movement .... showing all of us that mainstream cinema doesn't (and cannot) handle every aspect of film. An extremely different, unsentimental, and pleasant experience.

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      In 2013, this film was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Film Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
    • Connessioni
      Featured in Los Angeles Plays Itself (2003)

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    Dettagli

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    • Data di uscita
      • 3 febbraio 1986 (Svezia)
    • Paese di origine
      • Stati Uniti
    • Lingua
      • Inglese
    • Celebre anche come
      • ευλογημένες καρδιές
    • Luoghi delle riprese
      • Watts, Los Angeles, California, Stati Uniti
    • Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro

    Specifiche tecniche

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    • Tempo di esecuzione
      • 1h 20min(80 min)
    • Colore
      • Black and White
    • Mix di suoni
      • Mono

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