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Nina

  • 2016
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.4/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Mike Epps, David Oyelowo, Jessica Oyelowo, Zoe Saldaña, and Ella Thomas in Nina (2016)
The story of the late jazz musician and classical pianist Nina Simone including her rise to fame and relationship with her manager Clifton Henderson.
Play trailer2:31
1 Video
11 Photos
BiographyDramaMusic

The story of the late jazz musician and classical pianist Nina Simone, including her rise to fame and relationship with her manager Clifton Henderson.The story of the late jazz musician and classical pianist Nina Simone, including her rise to fame and relationship with her manager Clifton Henderson.The story of the late jazz musician and classical pianist Nina Simone, including her rise to fame and relationship with her manager Clifton Henderson.

  • Director
    • Cynthia Mort
  • Writer
    • Cynthia Mort
  • Stars
    • Zoe Saldaña
    • David Oyelowo
    • Kevin Mambo
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.4/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Cynthia Mort
    • Writer
      • Cynthia Mort
    • Stars
      • Zoe Saldaña
      • David Oyelowo
      • Kevin Mambo
    • 46User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
    • 27Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Official Trailer

    Photos10

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    Top cast61

    Edit
    Zoe Saldaña
    Zoe Saldaña
    • Nina Simone
    • (as Zoe Saldana)
    David Oyelowo
    David Oyelowo
    • Clifton Henderson
    Kevin Mambo
    Kevin Mambo
    • Gilles, Lead Guitarist
    Ronald Guttman
    Ronald Guttman
    • Henri Edwards
    Chuma Gault
    Chuma Gault
    • Nina's Husband
    Allison Sarofim
    Allison Sarofim
    • Head Nurse
    Mike Epps
    Mike Epps
    • Richard Pryor
    Keith David
    Keith David
    • Clifton's Father
    Ella Joyce
    Ella Joyce
    • Clifton's Mom
    Stevens Gaston
    Stevens Gaston
    • Clifton's Brother
    Fred Cassidy
    Fred Cassidy
    • Customs Agent
    Jessica Oyelowo
    Jessica Oyelowo
    • Nurse
    Anthony Molinari
    Anthony Molinari
    • Cop #1
    Ella Thomas
    Ella Thomas
    • Lorraine Hansberry
    Bonnie Bartlett
    Bonnie Bartlett
    • Recital Stage Woman
    Ken Davitian
    Ken Davitian
    • Club Owner
    Camille Natta
    Camille Natta
    • Miss Larouche, Vocal Coach
    Marianne Muellerleile
    Marianne Muellerleile
    • Nurse Mary
    • Director
      • Cynthia Mort
    • Writer
      • Cynthia Mort
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews46

    5.43.1K
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    Featured reviews

    4tomofsweden

    An uninteresting depiction of mental illness.

    Nina

    Yet another film of a famous person that in reality is just an excuse to show off mental illness. In this case the bipolar condition of Nina Simone.

    The film assumes that the viewer already is familiar with her life. I wasn't. I only knew her by having heard a couple of her songs. The start of the film rushes ahead through her life to the very end of her life. But it doesn't start at the end and show flash backs. Well... sort of. It was mostly just a confusing mess and I had no clue what her career was like up to the end (where the film begins). The first concert she does is in a small bar. So as a viewer I'm like, OK, so this is the kind of concerts she had. And then I'm told she is one of the most famous singers. OK, so why is she in a small bar performing if she is so famous? And then somebody says that she should be in a huge concert hall, and not in a small bar. And I'm like, yes, so why isn't she? Please tell me, the viewer. No information.

    The film revolves around her (non-romantic) relationship with her nurse/assistant/manager. This is uninteresting. It never goes anywhere and there's very little tension. I suspect it's just badly acted. David Oyelowo plays the assistant. I had never heard of him. So I looked him up. He has a long career of so-so stuff. So he doesn't seem particularly talented. He seems to be established as a middling talent. So it's an odd casting. It seems to me like he just didn't have what it took to make this role work.

    Zoe Saldana plays Nina Simone. This is also not particularly interesting. But I don't think it's the acting that's the problem this time. I suspect the problem here is the script. A string of scenes showing a crazy person doing crazy things is not interesting. This is not a comedy. The craziness has to be coupled with her being sensible sometimes. There has to be some sort of balance. Nina Simone in this film goes from being disturbingly weird to being bouncing-off-the-walls-in-a-padded-cell- crazy. She's impossible to like. But she's famous for being a musical genius. She created amazing music and trail-blazed against all odds and conquered the world. This is not shown in this film. Nina Simone in this film is just nuts with no redeeming qualities. It's the stuff that made her famous that I'm interested in. This film provides none of it.

    They use the "Angry Black Woman" trope to it's fullest extent. Sure, Nina Simone does have ample reason to be angry. But this character seems utterly consumed by it. It's like she has nothing else going for her in her life.

    It would be nice with a film about a historical black person that doesn't focus on how much a victim he or she is. I'm not saying that black people historically haven't suffered. What I'm saying is that, by looking at the movies produced focusing on black people, black history seems to be defined by being a victim and nothing else. I'm starting to find this tedious. And in this film it's especially obvious, since her talents are so down-played. It's all about Nina, the crazy victim.

    I learned almost nothing about Nina Simone's music career.
    5Avwillfan89

    Wafer fin, badly chosen time period.

    After the big hoo-ha about how bad this film is, in particular because of Zoe Saldana's casting, I decided to give this movie a shot.

    I know virtually nothing about Nina Simone's life, but this film does not want to portray what her life was during her prime. Instead it relies on itty bitty pieces of dialogue during interviews and conversations with Nina's old friend Richard Pryor. It is set during the last decade of her life, when she is mentally ill, unstably alcoholic and very difficult to tolerate. Clifton (David Oyelowo), the nurse at the mental hospital where she is interred, takes her in, looks after her and eventually becomes her manager.

    The real problem with this movie is, glaringly, the time period of Nina's life. It's not a good one, and very little happens in the movie. We start her off as a little girl defying racial segregation so that her parents can sit in the front row. Nothing else is shown of her rise to fame and struggles, which makes the film feel very empty.

    One thing I really didn't like is the erasure of Clifton's homosexuality. Although he and Nina are not seen intimate with each other (at one point she calls him the F word when he refuses to have sex with her) there is a small implication. Why couldn't they show everyone he was gay?

    The last thing is of course Zoe Saldana as Nina. I personally feel the criticism (and it was extremely scornful) was very unfair. She did the best with what she was given, and she should be praised for it. The problem is not the color of her skin, its the age. She is supposed to be in her sixties, and yet Saldana is actually younger than David Oyelowo! They really couldn't find an older actress?

    At times the movie was painfully boring, badly paced and perhaps unintentionally funny. 5 out 10.
    1atotheron77

    An injustice to Nina Simone's legacy

    Everything you wouldn't want to see in a film about Nina Simone. While Zoe Saldana might get a C+ for effort, one wonders if there were any mirrors anywhere on set or if she figured CGI would fix her appearance; although, the problems with this abysmal film are greater than Zoe's horrific makeup. The story is disjointed and focuses on absolutely arbitrary parts of Nina's life. There is no depth or realness to Cynthia Mort's vision of Nina and - considering the subject matter - that's an injustice. It could be considered an accomplishment that Mort was able to create a film about Nina Simone that leaves the viewer feeling nothing at all. Perhaps the worst part of the film is how ugly they made Nina. While she might not have been what's considered conventionally pretty, Nina possessed an elegant beauty that was a powerful part of her performance. Nina Simone was a beautiful woman and to turn her into a creature from the blackface lagoon in a biopic is unforgivable.
    3RogerBorg

    It's OK When We Do It

    Wow, that was a tough watch. Saldana is an appealing and decent actress within her range, but she's way, way out of it here, and given a script and a character that she simply can't do justice to.

    It's rare that actors are asked to play older than their age, and for good reason: everyone can remember what it was like being younger, but can only imagine being older. There's no gravitas or presence to Saldana's performance here, and she can't anchor this muddled, tentative film. Since it's entirely about her, well, you see the problem.

    And we have to talk about the blackface. Saying "yeah, but it was required for the role" doesn't make it all right. That's how you get Occidentals playing Charlie Chan or Fu Manchu, or girls with less Native American ancestry than Elizabeth Warren playing Comanches.

    One rule for all, no exceptions, please.
    5subxerogravity

    Mediocrity at it's very worse

    So, I'll try to not include the controversy I heard about Star Trek's Zoe Saldana, playing the Infamous Nina Simone, although that's what made me interested in buying the ticket.

    Overall, Saldana's performance was just OK. It's not the worse thing I've ever seen, it's not the best performance I've ever seen. It's not a milestone in her acting career, unlike her co-star David Oyelowo's magnificent turn as Doctor Martian Luther King Jr. in the movie, Selma. Mike Epps made an interesting cameo as Richard Pryor in the movie which left me something more than Saldana as Simone.

    Nina is a focus on the last eight or so years of Simone's life, which was odd as Saldana (and the make up job they did on her) did not convince me she was a 70 year old woman. Mainly, it centers around the relationship Nina had with her new manager, Clifton Henderson.

    It's another one of these films that tells us more about the type of personality the artist is rather than anything about the person's life. It's similar to Don Cheadle's take on Miles Davis in the film Miles Ahead, but that film had some magic in it that this movie does not.

    Saldana and the film did an OK job letting us know the type of artist Nina Simone was, but you did not feel the passion behind it. I know it's near impossible to create a motion picture about Nina that would visually do what Simone could do with her musical talents, but I did not feel any effort towards it at all.

    So overall, at the moment Saldana still has playing the most ionic woman in Sci-Fi on the top of her resume, while playing the greatest singer of all time will not even register. The make-up was fine and her voice was satisfying, but like I said I was not expected her to sound like Nina Simone, but this movie is not passionate like her music.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Lisa Simone Kelly, Nina Simone's daughter, disavowed the project on grounds it was a dishonest look at her mother's life, particularly the turbulent romantic relationship between Nina and Clifton Henderson. In real life, Henderson was gay; he was Nina's confidant, but never her lover. As a result, Simone's family was not consulted during production. While the family said publicly they didn't have any personal issues with Saldana, they didn't agree with her casting because Nina Simone had much darker skin than Saldana and they felt the choice was an attempt to erase what Nina Simone herself called "essential blackness" from the movie.
    • Connections
      Referenced in The Cinema Snob: Marci X (2018)

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    FAQ17

    • How long is Nina?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 22, 2016 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Nina Simone
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • 66 Productions
      • Ealing Studios Entertainment
      • Ealing Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $7,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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