Ma Rainey's Black Bottom Is a Superb Film About Power, Art, Commerce, and Race
Chadwick Boseman shines in his final role.

There are no easy answers in Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, no pat solutions, just people and perspectives. While there are a handful of showstopping monologues, none of them tell you what to think or feel. Instead, they're setpiece moments in which the characters explain themselves, their stories, and how they see the world. The movie has plenty of speechifying, but no sermonizing; it's more interested in exploring different worldviews, the way they clash and conflict sometimes come together, than in asserting its own.
Based on the 1982 play by August Wilson, Rainey depicts a rocky recording session in 1920s Chicago, in which an all-black band, fronted by the real-life blues singer Ma Rainey, played by Viola Davis, meets, rehearses, and argues—amongst themselves and with Rainey's white manager and producer. Some of the tensions are distinctly racial, as Rainey, the label's top-selling artist, pushes back on the producer's petty exploitations. But the movie is just as interested in the power struggles between Rainey and the band members, particularly Levee, the young hotshot trumpeter, played by Chadwick Boseman in his final role.
This is an actorly film, with an outstanding ensemble cast, including Colman Domingo as the band leader, Michael Potts as the go-along bass player, and Jeremy Shamos as Rainey's manager.
But the movie belongs to Boseman and Davis, both of whom deliver titanic, screen-dominating performances. The conflict between them dominates the film and defines its thematic universe. Boseman's Levee is a brash, arrogant upstart who wants to rearrange Rainey's songs to be more upbeat and popular; it's an electric, vividly alive performance, and a reminder of how much we lost with his death. Viola's Rainey, meanwhile, is an elder who has fought mightily for her success, and knows how hard the road to change can be—and how fragile any earned success is. What's at stake is not just a recording of a song, but the entire future of their lives and their art, which the movie treats as inseparable. Theirs is a battle of wills and ideologies, and the movie is deft enough not to take sides.
Rainey is a movie about the complexities of power—cultural, economic, and interpersonal, and the ways that those different forms of power are often difficult to separate. But it's also a movie about decency and authenticity, hope and cynicism, what it means to live a good life and earn your keep.
Befitting a theatrical adaptation, Rainey is stagey and stylized, and as a result may not be for everyone. But it's far more than just a static reproduction of a play; the golden-hued cinematography is amongst the year's best, and director George C. Wolfe, who has extensive experience directing for the stage, moves the camera in ways that accentuate the conflict, pushing in for lengthy close-ups that would be impossible on stage.
Rainey's release on Netflix, combined with the continued closure of many movie theaters due to pandemic lockdowns, means few will ever see it on the big screen. But in some ways the home viewing experience suits it, making this production even more intensely intimate by bringing it to viewer's living rooms.
The movie's balance of cinematic production with overt theatricality sits it neatly in the tradition of talky stage-to-screen adaptations like David Mamet's Glengarry Glen Ross and the 2016 Denzel Washington vehicle, Fences, which was adapted from another Wilson play. But in some ways the movie it reminded me of most was Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, another stagey, theatrical movie about inter-group power dynamics, moral worldviews, and what it means to be a righteous person in the world. Wilson's original play, of course, predates Tarantino's movie by a decade, so any direct line of influence would run from Wilson to Tarantino. As Samuel L. Jackson, who worked with both, noted all the way back in 1994, the two share a talky, declarative sensibility, and a sense that, no matter who you are or what you do, life is mostly a tricky balance of doing what it takes to get by in the world while also trying to be good in it. Rainey admirably resists suggesting that this is simple, and even seems to wonder if it's possible at all.
One thing, however, is clear: Rainey is a superb film, richly crafted and brimming with ideas, and it's one of the better movies I've seen this year.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Excellent write-up, sounds like a very intriguing and relevant film. Interested to see how Viola Davis handles such a monumental role. Chadwick Boseman I’m sure would be proud to be in such a beautiful and inspiring final role. We could use more films like this. Thanks for the recommendation.
I am made $84, 8254 so far this year working online and I’m a full time student. I am using an online business. Here what I do,. for more information……… USA ONLINE JOBS
[ PART TIME JOB FOR USA ] Making money online more than 15$ just by doing simple work from home. I have received $18576 last month. Its an easy and simple job to do and its earning are much better than regulars office job and even a little child can do this and earns money. Everybody must try this job by just use the info
on this pages.....work92/7 online
Yes, nice response, EA. I, too, have put it on my "must watch" list behind all the other Reason-woke recommended movies.
Get $192 hourly from Google!…Yes this is Authentic since I just got my first payout of $24413 and this was just of a single week…MGb I have also bought my Range Rover Velar right after this payout…It is really cool job I have ever had and you won’t forgive yourself if you do not check it....
===========★ Home Profit System
Despite Suderman's SJW critical race theory orgasm watching this movie, most people found it to be incredibly boring. Little or no music to set the scene. Lots of sanctimonious speechifying. Boring.
I'm waiting for Robin Diangelo's take before I buy a ticket.
JOIN PART TIME JOBS
Google pays for every Person every hour online working from home job. I have received $23K in this month easily and I earns every weeks $5K to 8$K on the internet. Anm Every Person join this working easily by just just open this website and follow instructions
COPY This Website OPEN HERE..... Visit Here
"There are no easy answers in Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, no pat solutions, just people and perspectives."
I remember when people didn't look for any answers or solutions or perspectives in films, just entertainment.
I have noticed this trend with books too, especially this year. Every year I peruse "best of" book lists and I can usually find at least one or two promising titles to give as christmas presents. This year I had to wade through so much "Stunning brave trans Millenial of color deals with prejudice and first world angst and bravely emerges from it all as the most victimy victim that ever was a victim" the only good thing about it was i npw feel incredibly thankful that I don't know anyone who likes that crap.
When your primary audience is the NPR totebag crowd...
Plays rarely translate into successful films without a major re-work. But it would be raycissst to say it was B-O-R-I-N-G.
Was Chadwick Bozeman actually a trumpet player? If not, his legacy may be in danger.
I need to know if any of the characters are portrayed as being homosexual. If not, Hollywood needs to ban the movie.