Poster for Rosewood

Rosewood

No Longer Playing

1997 140 mins

Rated
r
John Singleton
Gregory Poirier
Ving Rhames, Don Cheadle, Jon Voight, Esther Rolle, Elise Neal

***Hosted by Sergio Mims, Festival Consultant of the Black Harvest Film Festival***

America is a country obsessed with neatly forgetting its past, and ROSEWOOD was a film eager to force remembrance. In many of his films, but particularly in ROSEWOOD, Singleton chose to see black people as more than just victims of violence, or capable of carrying out violence. Rosewood becomes a town worth mourning by the film's end because of how Singleton depicts the lives of the people in the town before the violence finds them. At its heart, ROSEWOOD is a love story, between two of its main characters (Ving Rhames' Mann and Elise Neal's Beulah), but also a love story about people who didn't have much, fighting to keep what they gained.

ROSEWOOD is a spectacular film that — like many of Singleton's efforts — defines the level of emotional intensity early, and then maintains that level the entire time. Also, like many of Singleton's efforts, it doesn't offer a solution for the whirlwind of peril or violence, just the reality of its aftermath. - Hanif Abdurraqib

1997
USA
English
140 mins

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