Screen/Society--Nasher Southern Cinema Film Series--"Eve's Bayou" [special 3PM start time!]

Sunday, November 13, 2016 - 10:00am to 12:00pm
Screen/Society--Nasher Southern Cinema Film Series--"Eve's Bayou" [special 3PM start time!]

Film Screening:

Eve's Bayou

(Kasi Lemmons, 1997, 109 min, USA, in English, Color, DVD) 

Black female writer-director Kasi Lemmons made her feature directorial debut with this period family drama set in the South. Depicting the African-American experience with a female slant, Lemmons shunned the usual urban violence and race issues of black films for a different approach, a jambalaya of Southern gentility, bayou traditions, and voodoo visions.

The Southern Gothic saga pivots around a prosperous Creole family in Louisiana during the year 1962 - as seen through the eyes of intensely curious, precocious, and perceptive ten-year-old Eve Batiste (Jurnee Smollett). Eve's coming-of-age events are introduced through her adult voiceover narration (Tamara Tunie), which begins, "Memory is a selection of images, some elusive, others printed indelibly on the brain. The summer I killed my father, I was ten years old." Her father, Louis Batiste (Samuel L. Jackson), is the area's much-respected doctor, and the proud and beautiful Roz (Lynn Whitfield) is Eve's mother. But Louis has an eye for other women, and after Eve catches him in the barn with an attractive, married woman, Matty Mereaux (Lisa Nicole Carson), he must reassure the child that he still loves her mother. Nevertheless, Eve is shaken by what she has seen, and she tells her older sister Cisely (Meagan Good). Eve's impulsive Aunt Mozelle (Debbi Morgan), a sexy, superstitious widow with three past husbands, has taken on a new lover, Julian Grayraven (Vondie Curtis Hall). Finding her beliefs in family loyalty crumbling, the young girl visits voodoo priestess Elzora (Diahann Carroll). A Pandora's box of long-buried Batiste clan secrets has been opened beneath the shade of the magnolia trees, and Eve struggles through the summer to save her family.

 

-- Winner of 11 film awards!

 

"An intensely emotional drama that mixes elements of Southern Gothic with the kinds of characters and tensions that prevail in the plays of Southern writers like Tennessee Williams." -- Emanuel Levy, Variety

 

"Writer/director Kasi Lemmons shows sweet judgment here, doesn't caricature or demonize the errant father, and elicits a host of nuanced performances from women of all ages." - Time Out 

Cost: Free and open to the public

Sponsors: Nasher Museum of Art and the Program in the Arts of the Moving Image (AMI).

Nasher Museum of Art