A young African-American living in Chicago enters into a seductive new world of money and power after he is hired as a chauffeur for an affluent businessman.A young African-American living in Chicago enters into a seductive new world of money and power after he is hired as a chauffeur for an affluent businessman.A young African-American living in Chicago enters into a seductive new world of money and power after he is hired as a chauffeur for an affluent businessman.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 4 wins & 7 nominations total
Aaron Moten
- Tony
- (as Aaron Clifton Moten)
Stephen McKinley Henderson
- Mr. Green
- (as Stephen Henderson)
Alan B. Jones
- Detective Calhoun
- (as Alan Bomar Jones)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I think this can only be seen as a metaphor because this "plot" can not be taken serious. For one hour the movie is alright even though is is poorly structured since usually within the first half hour you get what the story is about. Here you got no direction.
At one point our main character will do something unbelievable. I mean that in the literal sense. It is so ridiculously contrived to create drama that it is laughable. At this point it is as if you are watching a whole different movie. It becomes more of a montage and totally falls apart underlined by the unnecessary and pretentious voice over. Sad thing is there was very good acting in here.
At one point our main character will do something unbelievable. I mean that in the literal sense. It is so ridiculously contrived to create drama that it is laughable. At this point it is as if you are watching a whole different movie. It becomes more of a montage and totally falls apart underlined by the unnecessary and pretentious voice over. Sad thing is there was very good acting in here.
Quality acting, especially by our lead. The story alone garners it 5 stars...while the acting and directing does the rest. I enjoyed it and was hurt by it, while also being pulled on what character to route for...
I don't usually write reviews, but since I did not find any sound review here, here it is.
The movie builds up great, great character development, good acting, intriguing plot; and then the third act begins, and it's all downhill from there. All buildup and character development stare into abyss upon an obvious climax. The realism that was there in the first two acts dies in the third act, and questionable choices are made in the plot, which makes you doubt whether there are different writing teams for Native Son. P.S I haven't read the book.
I think this will suffice.
Native Son had the makings of a great film - setting, cinematography, cast, story... the plot builds, the characters are developed, and then - a sudden tragedy after which it felt like someone pulled the plug on the film.
Was it a lack of innovation with the screenplay? Was the film's budget exceeded?
Such a shame to develop a main character to this degree, and then basically shut the movie down.
Was it a lack of innovation with the screenplay? Was the film's budget exceeded?
Such a shame to develop a main character to this degree, and then basically shut the movie down.
Did you know
- TriviaAdapted from Richard Wright's novel of the same name.
- ConnectionsRemake of Sang noir (1951)
- How long is Native Son?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Vatan Evladı
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 44m(104 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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