Joel Rose Movies
A young girl learns to believe in herself and value her intelligence in this critically-acclaimed, family-friendly drama. Akeelah Anderson (Keke Palmer) is an 11-year-old being raised by her mother, Tanya (Angela Bassett), who was left on her own after the death of her husband. While Akeelah is a very bright girl, she's hardly a star student and seems afraid of acting like a bookworm around her friends and classmates. However, Akeelah's teacher sees genuine potential in her student and encourages her to enter the school's spelling bee, convinced Akeelah has the brains and the talent to win. Akeelah applies herself and emerges victorious in the local competition, but discovers the going gets tougher when she goes to a statewide bee, studying for the regionals under the aegis of strict English teacher Dr. Larabee (Laurence Fishburne), who consents to act as her coach A college professor who was a spelling-bee champ as a child, Larabee is a stubborn taskmaster who questions Akeelah's ability and commitment, but in time he develops a respect for his pupil and helps her prove her talent as she climbs the ladder to the National Spelling Bee. Meanwhile, Tanya feels intimidated when she finds the contests are dominated by children from wealthy families and privileged backgrounds, and argues that the competition may not be in Akeelah's best interest, believing instead that homework should be the one and only priority in Akeelah's life. It soon becomes apparent that if Akeelah has any intention of entering the national spelling bee championships in Washington, D.C., she will not do so with Tanya's permission or blessing. This marks the first onscreen reunion of Bassett and Fishburne since their Academy Award-nommed performances as Ike Turner and Tina Turner in Brian Gibson's 1993 biopic, What's Love Got to Do with It.
~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Laurence Fishburne, Angela Bassett, (more)
With their American indie drama Apart From That, tyronic directors Jennifer Shainin and Randy Walker interweave a trio of everyday tales concerning five characters, set against the backdrop of a Washington State small town. Walker and Shainin more or less devote equal time to each subplot, yet all provide fleeting glimpses of additional lives in the community and hints of the stories lingering behind visible façades. In the first thread, Ulla, a young hairdresser-in-training, rents a room from octogenarian Peggy (Alice Ellingson) who is saddled with an odd quirk: she habitually calls the volunteer firefighters to visit her, and strips in front of them. During her stay, Ulla eccentrically records sounds from the house as an informal keepsake of her time there. Meanwhile, Native American road worker Leo (Tony Cladoosby) struggles with grief over the untimely death of his best friend Calvin (Lawrence Cordier). And in a third substory, Vietnamese American Te, the manager of the small town bank, is forced to layoff marketing executive Lee (Gary Schoonveld) - alienating his own adopted son Kyle (Kyle Conyers), who is friends with Lee's biological son Tiffer (Joe Rose). Astonishingly (given the breadth of its content), the picture clocks in at a mere two hours. Shainin and Walker co-authored the original script, with a marked emphasis on finding the beauty and poetry in the everyday. ~ Nathan Southern, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Kathleen McNearney, Alice Ellington, (more)
The down-and-dirty side of building management in pre-gentrification Manhattan sets the stage for this dark comedy. It's 1981, and Joe Peltz (David Krumholtz) runs a newsstand in New York City, where he has recently married Annabelle (Clara Bellar), an exotic dancer from France who isn't in love with Joe but asked for his hand so she could get a Green Card. When Annabelle discovers she's pregnant, the couple decides they need a larger apartment, and Joe finds a flat in the East Village that's on the same block where his great-great-grandparents lived when they first came to America. However, the neighborhood is decaying and ridden with crime, and when Joe and Annabelle move into their new apartment, he's immediately drafted onto the building's co-op board, where he has to deal with a variety of eccentrics of various stripes and must often sleep in the lobby armed with a baseball bat to ward off junkies and burglars. But by far his biggest problem is Carlos DeJesus (Paul Calderon), a bully who has been squatting in the building for eight years with his roughneck teenage son, Segundo (Jon Budinoff). Carlos sees no reason why he should start paying rent, and he's made enemies with practically everyone who lives in the building, wasting no time in adding Joe and Annabelle to that list. So when a gasoline fire guts Carlos' apartment, the question is not who wanted him out, but who actually had the nerve to start the blaze. Based on a novel by Joel Rose, Kill the Poor was written for the screen by Daniel Handler, best known as the author of the popular "Lemony Snicket" books. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- David Krumholtz, Clara Bellar, (more)











