The Color Purple (1985) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
281 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
A true affair of the heart
gcd7030 May 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Genteel, softly spoken drama from Steven Spielberg was his first real venture into this genre. A departure from his normal adventure/fantasy fare, it paved the way for his 1993 success, "Schindler's List".

Based upon Alice Walder's Pulitzer Prize winning novel, the story concerns a young girl's arranged marriage of hardship to a brutal, angry farmer and her painful separation from her beloved younger sister Nettie. While the plot - about compassion, abuse and the power of love to heal all wounds - is often powerful and moving, it loses its way through the fault of continuity and Menno Meyjes' scrambling screenplay. "The Color Purple" is at times hard to follow and on one or more occasions tends to be a little erratic in regard to time frame. This lapse in scripting has cost the viewer the depth and detail obviously present in Miss Walker's novel. A real shame that maestro Spielberg was unable to pick out and rectify these problems, as most of the show is a wonderful example of his prowess as a director.

Performances are strong throughout, with Whoopi Goldberg making a debut - which she's never matched since with regard to acting accomplishment - as the heart broken Celie who just yearns to be loved. Danny Glover lends solid support, though his "Moses" was a superior turn for him in "Places in the Heart". The standout showing comes from the unheralded Oprah Winfrey as Miss Sophia, the single minded, fighting black woman whose spirit is crushed by a terrible incident involving a patronising, upper class white woman. Good support also from Margaret Avery, Adolph Caesar and Rae Dawn Chong.

Quincy Jones ( co-producer with Spielberg, Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall ) has penned a beautifully melodic score and also provided some original blues for the occasion. Editing from Michael Kahn is sound as always, while director of photography Allen Daviau shows consummate skill in capturing some glorious Southern scenery.

This true affair of the heart will surely bring a tear to your eye, it is just unfortunate we are left with so many unanswered questions.

Wednesday, January 15, 1997 - Video
18 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Spielberg crushing my heart
Scotthigginsmre6 May 2020
Review following a 2020 rewatch of this brilliant movie. Tears streaming down my cheeks on several occasions throughout and writing after a few minutes to reflect and recover. Leads all fantastic, particularly Whooping Goldberg. She was gentle, pathetic, strong and fierce and times throughout and all felt honest and believable. I was truly taken in her journey and came out almost exhausted from the roller coaster of emotions that she, and me, went through. Danny Glover does the impossible by being genuinely unlikeable through the majority of the movie. Oprah was another standout and well deserved of her Oscar nom. Overall, an outstanding movie that crushed my heart and had me sobbing but beautiful at the same time. Long yet fast paced. I'll watch again in a decade and have no doubt that I will be crying again.
22 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Well done Mr. Spielberg!
Steven Spielberg, proving he's one of the few modern filmmakers who has the visual fluency to be capable of making a great silent film, took a melodramatic, D.W. Griffith-inspired approach to filming Alice Walker's novel. His tactics made the film controversial, but also a popular hit. You can argue with the appropriateness of Spielberg's decision, but his astonishing facility with images is undeniable--from the exhilarating and eye-popping opening shots of children playing in paradisaical purple fields to the way he conveys the brutality of a rape by showing hanging leather belts banging against the head of the shaking bed. In a way it's a shame that Whoopi Goldberg, a stage monologist who made her screen debut in this movie, went on to become so famous, because it was, in part, her unfamiliarity that made her understated performance as Celie so effective. (This may be the first and last time that the adjective understated can be applied to Goldberg.) Nominated for 11 Academy Awards, including best picture and actress (supporting players Oprah Winfrey and Margaret Avery were also nominated), it was quite a scandal--and a crushing blow to Spielberg--when it won none.
25 out of 32 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
The Color Purple
Coxer999 June 1999
Beautiful adaptation of Alice Walker's riveting novel that captures your heart and soul with each frame. The cast of Goldberg, Glover, Winfrey and Avery are amazing and director Speilberg brings us into their lives with care and with passion. Snubbed at Oscar time, this is one of Speilberg's most important films.
31 out of 35 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Spielberg's 1st "Serious" Film Is Beautiful and Powerful...
Don-10228 March 1999
A film that can make you shed tears of sadness and tears of joy would be considered quite a step in the career of a common filmmaker. The fact is, Steven Spielberg, probably our greatest story-teller, has been doing this in various movie formats for years. THE COLOR PURPLE, at the time, was considered risky, especially after action classics like JAWS and RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK. In hindsight, this film should have come as no surprise, for Spielberg had made us cry tears of joy and sadness in E.T. Critics called COLOR PURPLE his entrance into intellectual fare. It is quite an entrance. No special effects, no swashbuckling, just brilliant story-telling based on a literary classic by Alice Walker. One surprise is how Spielberg could present such a moving film about African-Americans in the deep south. Slavery is gone, but in the south depicted here, it seems as though blacks are using other blacks as slaves.

Spielberg is always put down for sentimentalizing his pictures or adding an element of childishness to please the audience. This is really the first of overlooked films from his career that you cannot make these observations. It is the first in a line of films people either didn't see or wouldn't see because there are no aliens. EMPIRE OF THE SUN, ALWAYS, SCHINDLER'S LIST, etc.. His awesome talent is obvious with this specific picture because A) he uses mostly untrained, first-time actors, B) he tackles a subject most felt was unadaptable to the screen, and C) it is pure drama with no strings pulled where characters grow and change over the passage of roughly 30 years. It is almost epic-like in look and scope and the fact that it did not garner a single Academy Award from 11 nominations is a travesty and an insult.

Whoopi Goldberg is fabulous as the tortured Celie, an unattractive woman given away by her incestuous father to an abusive Danny Glover, who she only knows as "Mister". The film follows a path of occasional beatings and mental torture she goes through while with "Mister". The PG-13 rated film is pretty open to the sexual issues raised by the Walker novel. This is not "The Burning Bed" in Georgia by any means. There is no blatant revenge taken as might be expected. It happens gracefully. Goldberg perfectly plays a human being, someone in need of love and someone who deserves it. The films' most poignant and heartbreaking moment comes when Goldberg and her sister, Nettie (played by Akosua Busia) are separated, maybe forever. (Possibly foreshadowing Holocaust separation of child and parent?) You may have to check for a pulse if you are not moved by this sequence.

The color purple stands for the beauty of the fields and flowers surrounding these poor people. There really is something to live for, but love triumphs over all. Spielberg bashers take note: the guy can make an unforgettable classic without any cute aliens.

RATING: 10 of 10
174 out of 218 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Excellent!
tyvo7924 September 2021
It's rare for a film adaptation to really capture the core materials essence. In 1985, Steven Spielberg accomplished that with this absolute masterpiece. In my opinion this is his best film and I'm a big fan of his work. 11 Oscar nominations and 0 awards. It's a travesty. Out of Africa is a good movie but I've never had the urge to ever see it since I first watched it. On the other hand, The Color Purple is a film that demands attention! The entire cast give their heart and soul to their performances and it shows. Full of all the emotions you didn't know you had and amazing quotable moments, it's one of the most human stories ever committed to film and one of the most soul-feeding. The cinematography is one of the best I've ever seen to date. I'm really tired of reviews from people that don't have a spirit or even know about the novel. It's a work of fiction. Some elements aren't going to be super-realistic based on that factor alone. Get a grip. It's a beautiful film with a beautiful message of hope over adverse circumstances. It's not that strange. Truth has often proven to be stranger and more unbelievable than fiction.
7 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
I wouldn't change a single thing about this movie.
kevin_robbins11 July 2021
The Color Purple (1995) is a movie I recently watched for the first time in a long time on HBOMAX. The storyline follows a little girl who was given away for marriage. Her husband is a lying, cheating abusive man who separates her from her family and forces her to live a life under his rule. When friends from her past get more involved in her life some years later, hopefully she gains the confidence to stand up for herself. The movie is directed by Steven Spielberg (Jaws) and stars Danny Glover (Lethal Weapon), Whoopie Goldberg (Jumping Jack Flash), Oprah Winfrey (The Butler), Margaret Avery (Magnum Force) and Rae Dawn Chong (Commando). The storyline for this is so well written and delivers compelling characters and brilliantly shows their evolution. It is very compelling. The cast delivers their roles perfectly and he cinematography and settings are magnificent. I wouldn't change a single thing about this movie. I loved it. I'd score this an easy 10/10.
17 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
"Yes indeed Lord. I know something's coming."
classicsoncall10 June 2019
Warning: Spoilers
It's difficult not getting emotional watching this film. The principal characters suffer racism, sexism, physical and mental abuse, and in Celie Johnson's (Whoopi Goldberg) case, the loss of a sister and theft of her children while a victim of rape. I don't know if it could possibly be worse for anyone, much less a person of color. The story is heart rending yet inspirational at the same time, as Celie perseveres through her misfortunes to become a person of noble character and inner strength. The race between her mentor Shug Avery (Margaret Avery) and the clock in that scene when Celie was about to shave or cut her husband's throat was one of the heart pounding moments of the film. Knowing what happened to Sofia (Oprah Winfrey) for sassing a white woman and knocking down the woman's husband, it would have been one of those life defining moments had she followed through on her righteous anger. A talented cast and an engaging story brought the movie a total of eleven Oscar nominations, and quite astonishingly, not a single win. The film's title implies that it's impossible to feel sad in a field full of purple flowers, and in it's closing moments, dares to remind us that even the worst of life's disappointments can give way to redemption and joy.
9 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Movie was Better than Book
view_and_review15 August 2019
The Color Purple, to me, is one of those rare movies that is better than the book. All of the performances were excellent and I think none were better than Danny Glover as Mister aka Albert. He was so good at being such a horrible human being.

Some of the broader themes from the book were a bit muted in the movie. It was still about Celie (Whoopi Goldberg) and her plight and that couldn't be missed. What was toned down was the lesbianism on the part of Celie as well as the misandry. The book is filled with both overt and subtle misandry to the point that you get the clear impression that the author herself hates men. There's hardly a man in the book that is free of being some type of oppressor of women.

The movie never conveyed that as much as it conveyed Celie's horrible experiences with her father and her husband. Kudos for whoever adapted it for the big screen because it became a better production.
9 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
huge achievement from Spielberg
didi-514 July 2004
The film version of Alice Walker's hugely emotive and influential 1983 novel (written largely as letters from the central character Celie to God) was a massive Oscar success, and rightly so.

In the role of the abused and awakened Celie, Whoopi Goldberg gave her best screen performance by miles. Not far behind her was Oprah Winfrey as Sofia, the fiery woman tamed by fate. Others in the cast fleshed out the characters Walker had introduced so clearly on the page - Danny Glover as Albert, Celie's abusive husband; Margaret Avery as Shug, a force of change for the good; Willard Pugh and Rae Dawn Chong as Harpo and Squeak; Susan Beaubian as Corrine, the preacher's wife; and the much-missed Carl Anderson (otherwise best known as Judas in the 1973 film of Jesus Christ Superstar) as preacher Samuel.

Beautifully paced and sensitively written, 'The Color Purple' does justice to its source while opening out the story to involve viewers of a feature-length drama.
57 out of 83 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
I'M POOR, BLACK, I MAY EVEN BE UGLY, BUT DEAR GOD, I'M HERE! I'M HERE!
thomasmitilis19955 June 2020
Warning: Spoilers
PROS: ~Whoopi Goldberg portrays brilliantly Celie, a human being who needs and deserves love. Celie is a woman with a lost identity followed by her defiance in reclaiming the life she lost. Through her character the film depicts the problems of sexism, oppression and systematic abuse. The song of Shug for her or when she dresses like her are a few moments of happiness through a harsh and unfair world. For all these reasons, you root for her when she stands up against Albert. ~The first act of the movie is the best part of the film despite the rough scenes. We see through a couple scenes a woman who is raped and impergrated by her father, gives birth in a dirty barn, forced to marry an older man that constanly beats her and uses her as his slave by cooking and providing for his children. The separation between the sisters is a heartrending moment and makes their reunification in the end emotionally touching. ~The rest of the cast is fantastic. Donald Glover as the cruel husband, Albert is awesome and you feel disguise for him because he treats his wife like property. Oprah Winfrey gives a powerful performance as Sofia and you feel her pain when she is treated like garbage and doesn't even have the time to be with her children in Christmas. Margaret Avery as Shug is a woman who is an inspiration to Celie and shows that a sinner can have a soul too. ~Spielberg challenged himself here after his successful blockbusters and his direction is subtle and beautiful. The transition from the sisters playing in the purple fields to the leather belt hanging in the bed is a nice way to prepare the audience for what is coming. Besides this, the music score by Quincy Jones is wonderful and enhances perfectly the dramatic tension.

CONS: ~The film succumbs to many conveniences and doesn't escape from the typical holywood standards. The happy closure of Shug is poorly executed and her singing sequence in the end is awkward. Furthermore , the remorse of Albert by helping the two sisters to connect again is very unrealistic. ~Another problem of the film is its continuity. After the shocking first act and the attachment to the two sisters, the movie forgets this storyline until the end. In other worlds, you are immersed into the film because of their strong connection and suddenly the movie puts you into other subplots that don't grab you in the same level. ~The tone of the movie is incoherent in some parts and the humor doesn't work among the serious subjects. For example, the slapstick humor around the character of Harpo is unfitting and the scene with the white lady surrounding by some black men is a bit silly. Also, it is weird that the abuser is played as a joke character in some scenes.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Timeless
seanrobinsonjr4 November 2018
A classic, and timeless film about generational and pathological struggles of black women.
5 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Too careful and slick overall, but undeniably moving...
moonspinner552 October 2005
Steven Spielberg's too-bright, overlong, slickly-designed adaptation of Alice Walker's book about a repressed black woman in the old South living at the mercy of her brutish husband, mourning her separation from her beloved sister, and having a flirtatious friendship with a sexy female singer who passes through town. Spielberg guides the viewer through the crowded script quickly and with ease, and the introductions to the characters are jazzy and direct; but, whereas the director is terrifically at home with his cast, he doesn't seem to know how to stage this story. It's mounted like "Gone With the Wind", with a sweeping grandeur that treats the material with cartoonish reverence. Results are both moving and sticky, with finely-wrought sequences quickly followed by banal whimsy and heartache. Whoopi Goldberg is terrific in the lead, and some of the dialogue has a haunting, evocative feel, but we're never aware of this as anything but a movie, staged and mechanically set-up to wring tears. **1/2 from ****
50 out of 104 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Tedious and Irritating
bobstopper3 December 2006
I don't mind a film which uses tragedy to pull at heart strings, but it has to be intelligent and tasteful. The Color Purple is no such film. Spielberg lays the tragedy on with a thickness which makes it seem ludicrous. It seems the vast majority of the film does little more than try to insist upon its viewers that this woman's life is sad and unfair using methods which are so exaggerated and transparent that it distracts the viewer from getting lost in the story and simply keeps reminding them that they're watching a film which is trying far too hard to make them feel something.

Some examples of this over-reaching can be seen in Whoopi Golberg's portrayal of Celia; the ridiculous state Celia first finds her new home in; the way Celia and Shug read in turn; and the irritating mood music played on cue each time Spielberg tries to saturate us in whatever emotion he's trying to evoke in us. The concept of subtlety has been completely lost on Spielberg in this film.

The film does have its saving graces however. Apart from Goldberg's overdone portrayal of Celia, the acting is good, particularly from Oprah. The story itself (which I have not read) would quite probably be very emotional and interesting if it hadn't been told with such awkwardness. Margaret Avery's singing was divine, truly the only thing in the film that made me authentically feel something other than the urge to stop watching. For these things I give the film a 4. Had Spielberg not corrupted it so badly it quite possibly might even be worth the 7.6 stars it currently sits at on IMDb.
35 out of 64 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Simply beautiful
krhayes-126 March 2002
Simply beautiful really is the only way to describe such a wondrous film, one which warms the heart, nourishes the soul, and brings a tear to the eye. This statement is neither hyperbolic nor exaggerated, one of many reasons I suggest you see this film.

The film opens in 1909 when Celie (Whoopi Goldberg in her feature film debut) as a young girl, as well as a victim of incest, impregnated by her father. Unattractive and unloved, separated from her beloved sister and children, Celie has no other option than to be wedded to an abusive, impoverished, and philandering husband named Albert (Danny Glover), a man who treats her no better than a slave. However, Celie's life forever changes when Albert returns home in accompaniment with his mistress Shug (Margaret Avery), a beautiful Blues singer.

In spite of the seemingly hopeless situation the film's plot provides Celie with, the Color Purple is not a tale of her despair, but rather her triumph, one which is immensely inspiring. Stellar in every aspect this film is, including Stephen Spielberg's highly credible direction, the acting, especially of the four most prominent stars: Whoopi Goldberg, Oprah Winfrey (both quite impressive in their debuts), Danny Glover, and Margaret Avery, the plot, etc. As one of my most revered novels and films, I definitely recommend the Color Purple.

Grade: A+
81 out of 111 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Just Wow
cuyler_mariama8 December 2021
Whoopi Goldberg & Oprah Winfrey oh you know it's going to be stellar! I love love love this film! You can tell the chemistry, script and spirits were in sync by how well the film came out!!!
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
This is a movie!
EFRA10 July 1999
This film captured my heart from the very beginning, when hearing Quincy Jones' first notes or seeing the wonderful color of purple of the flowers in the meadows. This is truly a film to cry and die for...! The whole cast gives the best performance in a film I've seen in years and Spielberg has really outdone himself! Whoppi Goldberg, Margaret Avery, Oprah Winfrey(oh lord!), Danny Glover, and the others, all give us their best and you can feel it - almost touch it! Goldberg IS Celie, she gives her that insecurity and feeling of inferiority that is needed for the character, and we grow with her, we grow strong together with her, throughout the movie, and we triumph with her. Margaret Avery is wonderful as Shug Avery, even when she's at her most arrogant, and shows us that "sinners", indeed, "have souls too". The always sympathetic, charming Danny Glover makes a marvellous job at making people hate him and the magnificent music of(I'd say sir)Quincy Jones adds even more beauty to this splendid film! The photography, the music, the director and the music makes this beautiful, soulful movie into an experience of life. You don't want to miss it! "Sista'...remember my name..."
37 out of 54 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The trials and tribulations throughout the horrific life of Celie Johnson, a black woman in 1920's America.
atsfthom13 April 2015
Coming in 1985, this was Steven Spielberg's first attempt at melodrama; he had directed Raiders of the Lost Ark and E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial 3 and 4 years previously. This inaugural bid for Spielberg as a dramatic director feels a bit clumsy at times, and at times he struggles to portray harrowing oppression suffered by Celie Johnson, the film's protagonist. This may be the result of the film's PG-13 rating, as the harsh themes of domestic violence and incest are at times brushed over too lightly. Despite these issues, Steven Spielberg's dramatic debut is shot tremendously and full of brilliant performances. Danny Glover, while subdued by the film's hesitation to portray violence, is convincing as the abusive husband of Celie. Whoopi Goldberg is fantastic as Celie Johnson, and was undoubtedly robbed of an Oscar in 1986. Margaret Avery is also great as the inspiration to Celie and performs a few great songs, at least one of which also should have won an Oscar. But the real standout performance is from Oprah Winfrey as the empowering Sofia, giving by far the most moving performance in the film. The original music and musical collaboration in the film is superb, adding a lot of heart to the film. If you are a fan of Steven Spielberg, and want to see his origins in drama, this movie will not disappoint. It is a great film for black and female empowerment, but is not as brutal as films like Schindler's List, making it a great introductory drama to Spielberg's decorated career.
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Sit back and soak it in!
Sifoo26 November 2018
Just sit back and absorb greatness!! You know what your getting into with this movie,....it's going to be a roller coaster of emotion! I know when I watch this movie I'm prepared to cry, laugh, sing and get angry! I know I'm gonna watch some exceptional acting directed by an amazing director! It's a win -win!......I mean it's the freakin COLOR PURPLE!! .......enough said 👍🏽
4 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Vintage Spielberg In Both The Good & Bad
ccthemovieman-127 January 2007
As with many Steven Spielberg films, this is a beautiful-looking movie, scene-after-scene almost looking like paintings. To me, that was the main attraction of the movie because the story - although powerful - to me, wasn't as appealing as the rich visuals. It's also one of those films almost guaranteed to bring a tear or two to ones eyes at the end.

This is much more involving story if you are a woman or black person, because you can relate more to the characters in the film. As with typical Hollywood, political correctness rules: most of the men (white or black) are bad while the women (mostly black) are all good. If you are a male watching the movie, this bias in the story can be very annoying.

Individually, I remember first watching this (I've seen it a couple of times) and being surprised what a good actress Oprah Winfrey was, and how appealing was Whoopi Goldberg's character "Celie." Goldberg became a star after this film (also for her comedy appearances on TV) but I always thought this role was, by far, her best or, at the least, her most appealing.

Rae Dawn Chong never looked prettier and Margaret Avery played a real charmer. Danny Glover was effectively nasty. You wanted to punch his lights out!

Overall, expect for what I mentioned above, this was good storytelling and certainly an involving, emotional story.
32 out of 64 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Heart warming/breaking
vin_moran19 April 2007
I gave this film 10 not because it is a superbly consistent movie, but for it's pure ability to evoke emotions in its audience. The story of one-woman's-struggle-against-all-odds is an old cliché by now, but very few films have carried it off with so much warmth and sincerity as The Color Purple.

It also showed a different side to the African-American experience - showing that after slaves were granted freedom many fell into the ways of the hated 'white man' and were abusive of their own people. I find this an important point as it goes against the portray-white-on-black-violence-and-win-an-Oscar trend.

Also the acting performances are superb - especially Oprah who I now have a new found respect for.

Well worth watching - but keep some tissue handy.
19 out of 28 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
good work from Whoopi
SnoopyStyle28 September 2014
Celie Johnson (Whoopi Goldberg) grows up in the south during the early 20th century. By the time she's 14 years old, she's already given birth twice by her abusive father. She is married off to "Mister" Albert Johnson (Danny Glover) who abuses her and uses her more like a slave to take care of his bratty kids. Her younger sister Nettie (Akosua Busia) comes to stay but she rejects Mister once too many times. He kicks her out. Then the outspoken Sofia (Oprah Winfrey) who marries Albert's son Harpo (Willard E. Pugh) comes into Celie's life. Mister's lover Shug Avery (Margaret Avery) stays with them and befriends Celie. It also turns out that Nettie has been living with missionaries in Africa and sending letters to Celie but Mister has been keeping them from her.

I feel worn out by the overwhelming oppression that befalls Celie. Steven Spielberg does it with a light touch that keeps it from being dark and sullen. Nevertheless I feel for Celie and suffer along side her. It's a big melodramatic farce period piece. I won't go as far as saying that this is one big stereotype. It does lack a certain realism. It feels like a folk tale. It says something about women empowerment. For that good intention and the expert production, it's a movie worth watching.
8 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
A triumph
RossRivero9916 October 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Steven Spielberg's The Color Purple a film that is based on the 1982 novel of the same name by Alice Walker is nothing short of a masterpiece. The movie is one of the only character studies I have ever seen that Spielberg has made,in fact is is the study of a young black woman named Celie Johnson (played by Whoopi Goldberg in a groundbreaking film debut.) who gets tortured, abused, and loved at the same time by friends as well as family relatives. the abusive husband in this movie is played by Danny Glover who wants to marry Celie's sister but ends up marrying Celie instead, the saddest scene in this movie is when Celie's sister gets taken away from her because of the Glover character molesting her and throwing rocks at her for no apparent reason, while watching most of the movie people hate Glover's character but by the end of the film I learned that he wasn't much of a bad person after all. The movie also has a great supporting cast which consists of Oprah Winfrey as Sofia, Margaret Avery who is one of Celie's best friends and many more unknowns. This movie goes along with some of Spielberg's best films such as Schindler's List (1993), E.T. (1982), Jaws (1975), Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981), Lincoln (2012), Minority Report (2002) as well as Catch Me If You Can (2002), and Munich (2005).I just can't say anything else about this movie is that I just love this movie.
8 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Whoopi acts! Spielberg serious film first.
tonypeacock-13 October 2022
Warning: Spoilers
1985 Steven Spielberg directed film.

Now at that time Spielberg had only directed (hugely successful) films in the main about fish with sharp teeth, aliens and 1930s archaeologists!

The Color Purple was perhaps his first serious feature about a black community in the early twentieth century.

The film was notable not only for Spielbergs change in film directorial path but the screen debut of Whoopi Goldberg, the acting (yes acting) presence of Oprah Winfrey and other great performances from the likes of Danny Glover who I had only associated with the Lethal Weapon franchise.

The film is based on the novel by Alice Walker about a poor black community in particular the character of Celie (Oscar nominated Whoopi Goldberg).

Celie is a shy woman bullied by her mean husband Albert (Danny Glover) and long since split from her beloved sister and children (who were forcibly taken from her at birth).

Spielbergs first foray into more serious cinema is a success and would pave the way for the likes of Empire Of The Sun and Schindler's List perhaps his career zenith thus far which for such a successful director is no mean feat!

The film was also notable for being nominated for 11 Academy Awards and winning none! A record matched I believe.

Even so a good film none the less and one who's 150 minutes or so running time seems to fly.
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Can you say, "syrup"?
voidmind27 March 2003
Warning: Spoilers
You may consider a couple of facts in the discussion to be spoilers.

I'm sorry, but Spielberg didn't deserve to win any Oscar for this piece, and I think the Academy was right in that vote. (Other Oscars for best actor nominations and such... that I don't know about. But it would be hard to justify, given what they were told to do and what you see in the final product.) The way Spielberg directs this is so contrived, so meddlesome. While watching this movie a distinction made during a Film as Art course I have taken was screaming at me: "Sentiment is honest emotion honestly rendered. Sentimentality is sugary and unreal, a false view of life." This is over-the-top sentimentality. When in real life to two people ever begin to read out loud in synchronicity, as Celie and Shug Avery do when sitting on the bed going over the letters from Nettie they have found? There are examples of this type of faux behavior throughout the film: all the men crowding around Miss Millie's car and then jumping in unison like a flock of birds taking off when she goes to drive away; Harpo falling through the roofs of various buildings he's working on (a cheap slapstick gag); the whole troop of revelers heading from the Jook Joint en masse to the chapel, as if magically entranced by the choir's singing... on and on. Nothing rings true. I even wondered if Harpo's name was chosen purposefully because it's his wife Sophia's real name, "Oprah," backwards. Spielberg isn't above such "cuteness."

It's not that Spielberg is incapable of honestly rendered action and emotion. Schindler's List was amazing, deeply touching for me, and I greatly admire Saving Private Ryan too for its realism, even if the story is a bit contrived.
43 out of 84 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed