DVD Review Monster’s Ball: Is Halle Berry`s Sexually Explicit Movie Progress Or A Step Backwards For Black Women In Hollywood?

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First, let me say congratulations to Halle Berry for having a successful delivery and giving birth to a healthy baby girl. Halle must be thrilled right now she’s always wanted to have a child. I am sure Halle will be a wonderful loving and caring mother. Although, some people think I don’t like Halle Berry this is simply not true. I believe  Halle is a solid actress one of her performances was in the television film “Introducing Dorothy Dandridge” for HBO.

Eighty three year old Ruby Dee, was nominated for her performance in the film “American Gangster” she didn’t win. I was shocked this was Ruby Dee’s first Oscar nomination for best supporting actress. I think it is such a disgrace that Ruby Dee wasn’t nominated for her electrifying performance in the 1961 classic film “A Raisin In The Sun.”

I started to think to myself what is Halle Berry’s appeal really all about? Obviously, Berry is a very attractive woman I’m not blind. My questions refer more about Halle Berry’s acting abilities. Halle Berry definitely takes risks in her roles more risks then other black actresses. I applaud Halle for taking challenging roles for pushing the conventional thinking about black woman. Halle Berry’s most controversial and perhaps the one she won an Oscar for was for Monster’s Ball. Halle’s acting in Monster’s Ball is superb you see the layers, the complexity the feelings of anguish, sadness, grief, regret, pain, and finally acceptance of her character’s circumstances.

I also believe Halle Berry benefited at being at the right place at the right time. Prior to winning the best actress Oscar, Berry was already the top actress of colour in Hollywood. The best actress Oscar win simply cemented Halle Berry’s A list status. The question is, will another black woman ever win best actress Oscar? Does it even matter? Should we care? Or is the bigger issue the lack of dramatic roles for black women? The Oscars appear to me to be more about politics then about the actual craft of acting.

In the year 2002, the Academy had heard for years that talented black actors weren’t winning Oscars. The Academy killed two birds with one stone giving the best actor and actress Oscars to Denzel Washington and Halle Berry. I cringe when people say this is progress. I am not so sure. Denzel’s character in “Training Day” was a crooked cop. Halle Berry’s character in Monster’s Ball comes across as a whore willing to do anything to move up the social ladder.

Some of the the criticism for Monster’s Ball, is the fact, many people believe Halle’s character Leticia Musgrove should of went to a less sexually attractive actress. I will admit seeing Halle even without make up on she still looks glamorous even though she’s not supposed to be. It makes sense that Billy Bob Thorton’s character the racist prison guard Hank would want to have sex with Leticia. Althoughm Hank is a racist he is still a red blooded man with raging hormones.

The part of Monster’s Ball I don’t believe, is how quickly Hank “falls in love” with Leticia it doesn’t make sense to me. Was it love or just lust? How can a man in middle age suddenly transform so quickly from being a racist bigot to falling in love with a black woman? Why did Hank send his racist father to the nursing home after insulting Leticia? I doubt this would occur in the real world.

After, Leticia’s husband is executed, she is struggling to pay her bills. Leticia she is forced to leave her apartment and Hank decides to help her. The question is why? What was Hank’s real motivation? I wondered why didn’t the movie explore this a bit more? Didn’t Leticia have any family or friends or any connection to the black community? Leticia appeared isolated from the black community?

Perhaps, this was the screenwriter’s true motivation the fantasy that a black woman needs to be saved by a white man in order to have a better life? The screenwriter’s real motivation also is to cheapen a black actress force her to perform in a degrading and racist sex scene for shock value. Hank doesn’t appear to me as a noble or nice man. He just looks like a racist old man that wanted to exploit a beautiful black woman since she was was vulnerable and in danger.

Heath Ledger has a small but important role in Monster’s Ball his character Sonny. Ledger’s character is a sensitive young man, he works with his father at the prison. Heath Ledger was an attractive guy he easily could of been Halle’s love interest in Monster’s Ball. I think Berry and Ledger becoming a romantic couple in this movie would of made more sense. Sonny is depressed, he feels unloved, he sleeps with prostitutes because he cannot make a connection to a woman in the mainstream world. Sonny also feels unloved by his racist father Hank. I think it would of made more sense if Heath Ledger’s character Sonny fell in love with Leticia because Sonny wasn’t a racist.

Billy Bob Thorton is simply too repugnant, unattractive, and old for the leading man role. It just didn’t seem right that Leticia would fall in love with such an unappealing old guy. Monster’s Ball would of been a more interesting movie if Sonny and Leticia fell in love because they are closer in age and Sonny appeared to to be more open about interracial romance. Sonny was just insecure and weak he followed his father Hank because he was desperate for his approval and love. Sonny wasn’t a racist. Sonny commits suicide right in front of his father Hank and his racist grandfather.

Leticia’s son also dies in a tragic accident. Next, the media and public focus shifts to the intense sex scene between Berry and Thorton. The sex scene seems to me purely for shock value a way to gain publicity for the film and it worked. I am sure millions of heterosexual men flocked to the movie theaters because they can see sex symbol Halle Berry naked in her full glory. Leticia Musgrove is reduced to the pernicious stereotype of being a whore. In Hollywood, black women are stereotyped two ways, the black woman is sterotyped as  either the maid or the whore.

The quandary is, the sex scene reduces Berry’s character Leticia to a filthy whore. Leticia screeches the famous line “make me feel good” with a sneer. I can understand why some black men were so enraged with the sex scene. The question has to be asked, does a black woman have to reduce herself in a licentious nude sex scene to win Oscar? Is this really progress?

When was the last time you saw Angelina Jolie in an intense interracial sex scene with With Smith? Can a leading black male actor have an explicit sex scene with a top white actress and win an Oscar? Can Terrence Howard have an intense sexual scene with Jennifer Aniston or Julia Roberts and receive critical acclaim? The answer is never because that’s never going to happen. Hollywood is all about white male dominance and white heterosexual men will never allow leading white women to have black male love interests.

Would a white actress that is considered beautiful have an intense, nude sex scene, with a black man and receive critical acclaim? Charlize Theron and Will Smith have a movie coming out this year called Hancock and according to reports there is an interracial love theme in this movie. Hancock is going to be a comedy it is not a drama. Theron is an A list white actress actress she is considered to be one of the most beautiful and talented women in Hollywood. Will Smith is A list the most powerful man in Hollywood and he is black. The question is despite Will Smith’s crossover success will Hancock be a success with the black and white audiences? How intense will the movie’s interracial theme be?

The sex scene in Monster’s Ball was meant to be fractured to be awkward, to illustrate two anguished souls smashing together for comfort. At the same time, Halle Berry’s sex appeal was exploited to lure in the male audience and create a buzz for the movie. Monster’s Ball reduces Leticia Musgrove to being a prostitute. Angela Bassett slammed the character Leticia Musgrove in a famous interview with Newsweek magazine. Bassett said she was not impressed with the character Leticia Musgrove because she believes it stereotypes black female sexuality.

The relationship between Leticia and Hank is basically a transaction it is a form of prostitution. Hank, the older white man, wants Leticia’s body because she is young and pretty. Hank will allow Leticia to live with him if she has sex with him. Since Leticia has no money, she offers her body to Hank for shelter. Hank also has a higher social status then Leticia she benefits from this as well. But where is the love? I didn’t feel that either character truly loved each other. I will give Halle Berry credit for taking on a role that despite the controversy. Berry’s acting is very strong, you really do believe Leticia is in a lot of pain. Monster’s Ball was the last big dramatic movie role for a black actress and that was over seven years ago. The paucity of leading lady roles for black women is still very rare. Think about it, when was the last time you went to a movie theater and saw a black actress in a serious dramatic piece as the leading lady?

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About orvillelloyddouglas

I am a gay black Canadian male.

11 responses to “DVD Review Monster’s Ball: Is Halle Berry`s Sexually Explicit Movie Progress Or A Step Backwards For Black Women In Hollywood?”

  1. MarvalusOne's avatar
    MarvalusOne says :

    The most pivotal moment of this movie, I think, comes at the end…when Leticia discovers that Hank is the guard that killed her husband and stays anyway…she had a choice to make and she decided that she had nowhere else to go…this was going to be a relationship of convenience and she was going to stay, despite everything.

    This movie was about lust, and sorrow, and tragedy bringing together two people mired in these things. There was never any love here; maybe relaxed comfort with each other, but no love…each was in a place where they needed someone to help them get past something…

    The sex scene, I thought, was to show the truly dire situation they both were in. Each of them just needed anything to hold onto for a moment that would allow them to escape from the outside world that was kicking their asses…the scene was ugly, and animalistic, and raw, because that is what they needed at the time…

    OK, I’m long winded so I’ll close…like Denzel in Training Day, I think you must look at this and view it as something that both Halle and Denzel had never done before…Did Denzel deserve an Oscar for Malcolm X? ABSOLUTELY!!! But you cannot deny that Alonzo in Training Day was out of control and something that you have never seen Denzel do, and because he pushed the envelope, he won…the same with Halle…

    Peace,

    M

  2. orvillelloyddouglas's avatar
    orvillelloyddouglas says :

    @ Marvalus One about the sex scene it definitely was raw but I just didn’t like the first part when Halle sneers the line “can you make the feel good!” I always cringe when I hear the line it doesn’t make sense. It came across as weird and strange. I thought that was a stereotype in a way.

  3. theblackactor.com's avatar
    theblackactor.com says :

    There was something comical in that line, wasn’t there? And cringeworthy, as well. LOL. I’m not as bothered by the sex scene as others. I do think it is representative of certain things; a matter I will take up on my own blog, when I get around to it.

    One thing no one talks about is the miscast of that child. I wrote a post on that last June as I was preparing my blog for launch. I’ve not published it. Maybe I will.

    It occurred to me, Orville, that you discuss American cinema. Why not Canadian? What’s their “Hollywood” like? I’m curious, actually.

  4. orvillelloyddouglas's avatar
    orvillelloyddouglas says :

    @ Aulelia, I know some black women don’t like Taye Diggs because he made some stupid comments in a controversial interview. Taye Diggs is whack! Now Cuba, girlfriend I don’t know where Cuba’s career has gone but down the tubes LOL!

    @ The Black Actor I will discuss a Canadian film soon to be honest most Canadian movies are drum roll please…. boring and have absolutely nothing to do with black Canadians. I do remember liking the Canadian film “Kissed” with Molly Parker that movie was very controversial one of the few Canadian movies that shocked the world. Clement Virgo he’s a young black Canadian filmmaker I’ve seen a few of his movies. The problem with Canadian cinema is black Canadians are ignored. It is very rare that black Canadian films are even made and they rarely ever receive distribution. The Canadian film industry is too esoteric. Most Canadian films don’t even have solid distribution. Even some Canadians avoid Canadian movies like the plague. The movies tend to get funding from the government and it is basically nepotism very few people get films made unless you’re Sarah Polley and you’re already established.

  5. black|woman|unhinged's avatar
    black|woman|unhinged says :

    I adore Monster’s ball. I think folks focus on the sex sense so much they miss why the two leads connected in the first place – pain & loss of losing their sons.

    Suffering a great loss causes us to make choices we might not normally make. It makes a lot of sense that those two people choose to be with one another.

  6. black|woman|unhinged's avatar
    black|woman|unhinged says :

    On casting – MB is the only film Halle demonstrated her acting chops in. But I would have preferred someone else, like Viola Davis. That woman holds tragedy in her face like no other!

  7. aulelia's avatar
    aulelia says :

    Monster’s Ball is a very good film IMO because of the performances. The sex scene does not pull away from it. It is an uncomfortable scene but one that gets people talking nonetheless. I do agree with you about the paucity of roles for black ladies. But the question is, is Tyler Perry the only answer ? where are the other black filmmakers? what is spike lee doing ?

    Your point about the upcoming Hancock is very interesting. The interracial theme in the film as you mentioned, I don’t think it will hurt Will’s star power at all because he is a bigger star than Theron AND he married black and represents. I know these sound like elementary assertions but Will Smith is no sell-out like Taye Diggs or C.Gooding Junior. The film will work well for him, as most of his films do, just because he can act and well, he is Will Smith – gorgeous, talented and seemingly down to earth.

  8. black|woman|unhinged's avatar
    black|woman|unhinged says :

    On Canadian films – I love them. One of my favs is The Hanging Garden. And I adore Guy Madden’s films, Cowards Bend the Knee and Saddest Music in the World

  9. theblackactor.com's avatar
    theblackactor.com says :

    @ Orville

    Oh. Interesting. Very interesting. Thanks for explaining.

  10. amsyvideoevents's avatar
    amsyvideoevents says :

    It’s true. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a film on black canadian life.

  11. black|woman|unhinged's avatar
    black|woman|unhinged says :

    It’s true. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a film on Black Canadian life.

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