Wednesday, March 4, 2020

BOOMERANG 1992

Reversal of a Dog

Boomerang is one of my all-time favorite romantic comedies. Time has rendered its already-remarkable cast of Black actors a once-in-a-lifetime assemblage, but the film itself is genuinely hilarious and its premise so irresistible, I’m surprised it hasn't been used before (or perhaps it had, only I've failed to come across it).
A callous, commitment-phobic, career-Casanova named Marcus Graham (dashing ad executive Eddie Murphy, ever on the lookout for perfection) suffers an ironic moment of reckoning when, after finally falling in love, he has the tables turned on him. The woman who sweeps him off his feet is Jacqueline Broyer (the elegant Robin Givens), a confident, flattery-immune executive (his new boss, in fact) possessed of effortless self-assurance and plenty of game of her own. A woman who, when it comes to artfully playing the field and displaying a mastery of the game of love-'em-and-leave-'em, proves in every way to be Marcus' match and “dog” doppelgänger.  
Eddie Murphy as Marcus Graham
Robin Givens as Jacqueline Broyer
Halle Berry as Angela "Agatha" Lewis
Grace Jones as Helen Strange (pronounced Strawn-J)
Eartha Kitt as Lady Eloise
I was instantly reminded of just why Boomerang’s premise so intrigued me when, while prepping this essay, my search for a laudatory, non-judgmental, non-pejorative term for the female equivalent of a Casanova or ladies’ man took me through Thesaurus Hell and back; there really isn't one. The appeal of the so-called charming womanizer has always been lost on be, yet the pop-cultural cult of the loveable lothario has left us with countless variations on admiration-laced labels like Romeo, playboy, and roué. But our culture’s rigid gender double standards have made no such allowances for women.
The only terms I came across for a woman who enjoys playing the sexual field are words reflecting the male gaze (i.e., seductress, temptress), your common vulgar epithets, or words that suggest they evolved out of fear of female sexuality (vamp, siren). I guess that leaves only the second-hand, non-partisan “playgirl.” 
Marcus, a serial girl-watcher, gets a taste of what it's like from the other side
when he becomes the objectified, sexualized subject of Jacqueline's dominant gaze

I was too young for the golden age of the romantic comedy. The days of Cary Grant and Barbara Stanwyck...back when Hays Code censorship necessitated the emphasis on “romance” and chemistry in lieu of demonstrative expressions of sexual attraction. I did, however, grow up in the ‘60s: the era of The Kinsey Report, the sexual revolution, and the heyday of the noxious "swinging playboy" stereotype (think Pal Joey-era Frank Sinatra and his ring-a-ding-ding Rat Pack). Goodbye, witty romantic comedies, hello, crass sex farce. A tiresome formula that presupposed men and women as combatants in formulaic Battle of the Sexes roundelays that all seemed to be about fuck-anything-that-moves bachelors out to trick superannuated virgins into bed before said conquest could trick them into marriage. 
Lela Rochon as Christie, a dog-lover who's also susceptible to dogs of the two-legged variety

Come the '70s, the chase-the-secretary-around-the-desk ‘60s womanizer was reimagined as the free-love hippie hedonist (The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart -1970) or the self-appointed soldier on the frontlines of the sexual revolution (Shampoo - 1975). In the '80s, man-boys replaced grown men in the rom-com landscape (Skin Deep -1989), every story now a variation on the arrested development Peter Pan being chased by a finger-wagging, killjoy Wendy. Mid-decade it became clear that the traditional sexual politics of the romantic comedy would have to change to accommodate women's more progressive, evolved gender status. Hollywood met the challenge by eliminating women from the equation entirely: hello, the Bromantic Comedy. 
Yes, those paying attention at the time recognized that the only real rom-coms being made were male-male romances disguised as buddy pictures: e.g., Eddie Murphy’s 48 Hrs (1982) and Lethal Weapon (1987).
Angela: "She's fantastic!  I mean, if I were a guy, I would probably be interested in Jacqueline"
The Good Girl vs Bad Girl Myth
Gender stereotypes mandate that women must always be perceived to be in competition. Angela and Jacqueline are neither rivals nor embodiments of the "good girl vs. bad girl" trope. (Boomerang ascribes no stronger moral failing to Jacqueline's choices than it's also willing to ascribe to Marcus'.) Like the female friends portrayed by Goldie Hawn and Julie Christie in Shampoo, Angela and Jacqueline's dynamic is simply two friends who are after different things from the same man.


The 1990s represented a boom era in Black Cinema. The start of the decade saw the release of films like To Sleep With Anger, Boyz in the Hood, Mo’ Better Blues, New Jack City, and A Rage In Harlem. Films that had me harkening back to the Black Film Explosion of the ‘70s--when, regardless of content or quality, the press insisted on labeling every single film with a Black cast “Blaxploitation.” The '90s boom produced a wide array of films, and amongst the youth-centric comedies and heavy dramas, Boomerang provided some much-needed old-style sophistication, glamour, romance, and escapism.
Geoffrey Holder as "Nasty" Nelson

Originally (and clumsily) titled Playboy Falls into LoveBoomerang came along at just the right time for me. I’d long ago made peace with rom-coms being “all hetero, all the time” (a treaty I’ve since broken), but such egalitarian magnanimity didn’t extend to rom-coms' “all white couples, all the time” view of love. Black couples in romantic comedies were conspicuous by their absence. When Boomerang came along, For Love of Ivy (1968) and Claudine (1974) were the only rom-coms on my favorites list that were about Black couples. And look at how far back we're talking! 
It’s as though Hollywood’s narrow-end-of-the-telescope insistence on filtering everything through a white narrative lens had reduced the entirety of Black experience to stories about race-based trauma. I imagined industry green-lighters found it inconceivable that Black people could laugh, meet cute, fall in love, break up, reconcile, and live happily ever after.
Marcus has a hard time wrapping his mind around the fact that the "model" he has been hitting on is actually the company's new Chief of Marketing. The very job he thought was assured to him after sleeping with the company's figurehead, Lady Eloise (Eartha Kitt)

WHAT I LOVE ABOUT THIS FILM
I’ve always felt the title Boomerang only half refers to the karmic reversal Marcus Graham’s love life undergoes in the course of the film. Boomerang is also a fair description of what lies in store for unsuspecting rom-com audiences confronted with the well-worn clichés of the genre subverted along lines of gender, race, and class.
I respond to Boomerang as I do the ‘70s comedies of Mel Brooks—it’s the ensemble contributions of the talented cast that make the film so funny, rather than any particular performance. (Although I could look at an edit reel of Grace Jones’ scenes exclusively and be in heaven. She’s that terrific.)
Martin Lawrence as Tyler, David Alan Grier as Gerard
Lawrence’s relentlessly “woke” character is essentially Alvy Singer in Annie Hall, who saw antisemitism in everything (“No, not ‘did you eat,’ but ‘Jew eat?’ You get it? Jew eat!” )

Mel Brooks breathed new life into classic film genres like the western (Blazing Saddles) and the horror film (Young Frankenstein) by infusing them with a contemporary, scatological comic sensibility. 
The Black Experience is so rarely depicted in movies that all Boomerang had to do to revitalize the romantic comedy was to de-centralize the white gaze. Suddenly, long-familiar situations, characters, and narrative devices felt fresh because of the simple fact then when you change the storyteller, you change the story. Boomerang presented the Black experience as it's lived by those living it, not by how it's seen and interpreted from the outside. It felt liberating to see Black characters humanized, with all the diverse shades of funny, vulnerable, intelligent, ambitious, sensitive, shallow, sexy, outrageous, glamorous...and yes, raunchy. But in a context lacking in response or reaction to the white gaze.
Bebe Drake and the late John Witherspoon are comedy gold as 
Mrs. & Mr. Jackson, Gerard's country-ass parents 

In trying to think of other "give him a taste of his own medicine" comedies, all I was able to come up with were two. Some Like It Hot (1959), in which two skirt-chasing musicians wear skirts themselves and learn what it's like to be on the receiving end of lecherous male advances. And Goodbye Charlie (1964) has a womanizer being shot by a jealous husband, only to come back reincarnated as a woman and having to fend off men like much like his former self. 
Leaving behind such farcical extremes, Boomerang is essentially a sex comedy of manners that has fun skewering traditional gender roles, double standards, and rom-com conventions.

Now the plot gets thick, Mr. Unplayable’s about to catch the short end of the stick. *
Waiting by the Phone
Taken for Granted
Woman on Top 
Seduced and Abandoned
It’s kinda like a boomerang; what you put out comes back to ya, it’s the same old thing. *
       *song "What Comes Around Goes Around" by Kid Sensation - 1995


PERFORMANCES
To anyone who knows me, it should come as no surprise when I assert that for me, the women are the chief attraction and saving graces of Boomerang...especially Grace Jones. It's also rare to see s many women with significant roles in one film. Best of all, they are all so dynamic, charming, funny, and charismatic, they succeed in smoothing out the rough edges attendant with my mixed feelings about the often problematic Eddie Murphy (who, to his credit, in an almost completely reactive role, is actually quite likable here.)
To have Grace Jones, Robin Givens, Halle Berry, Eartha Kitt, Tisha Campbell, and Lena Rochon all in the same movie is some kind of Essence magazine/Ebony Fashion Fair glam wish come true. They're really the film's most valuable players. So good, in fact,  that I found myself wishing the guys would all fade into the background and that Boomerang would morph into a hip update of Valley of the Dolls with Eartha Kitt as Helen Lawson, Halle Berry as Neely, Robin Givens as Anne, and Lena Rochon as Jennifer. Grace Jones could play any role she wanted.
"My role involved taking off my knickers in public, rubbing them in people's faces, chasing the pants off Eddie, and saying the word 'pussy' a lot with an accent that is from nowhere on Earth. ...I have no idea why they thought of me for the role."
Grace Jones being cheeky in her 2015 memoir I'll Never Write My Memoirs


THE STUFF OF DREAMS
On television recently I saw Oscar-winning screen icon Cicely Tyson relate a story about doing promotion for her 1972 film Sounder and having a white member of the press tell her that the film (about a Black family of sharecroppers in 1933 Louisiana) forced him to confront bigotry within himself because he had a hard time accepting the son in the story (Robert Hooks) calling his father (Paul Winfield) “Daddy.”

Yes, a Black character displaying basic, unremarkable humanity was enough to strain credibility for this man. And while I’m certain this story will leave some people feeling all warm and fuzzy because a Black film led a white man to recognize his prejudices, Tyson recognized it for what it was; a sign of the vast chasm existing between the reality of Black life and white culture’s perception of it. The phenomenon is so common it's been given a name--the Racial Empathy Gap, citing the difficulty white audiences often have in relating to Black characters in films. Cicely Tyson went on to say “That’s when I realized I could not afford the luxury of being an actress. There were some issues that I wanted to address. That I would use my career as my platform.”  
Black film - White Gaze Microaggressions
In 1992 this scene in a men's clothing store where a sales clerk assumes Marcus and his friends are unable to afford the merchandise was criticized for being a burlesque of racism. With the proliferation of cell phones, we now know the broadly-played scene was an exercise in subtlety compared to the reality.

And indeed, it has been the eternal legacy of Black artists in film to take up the mantle and use their artistic careers as platforms to combat Black invisibility and present the world with images of dignity to counter generations of racist dehumanization. But as author Toni Morrison so eloquently wrote and spoke about, the constant need to frame Black life in ways understandable, acceptable, and appeasing to white audiences not only seriously restricts the free, authentic expression of Black experience, but in the end only reinforces the false dominance of the white perspective.
Spike Lee's pioneering films broadened the scope of what Black films looked like, paving the way for the Hudlin Brothers' Black business world setting of Boomerang (which in real-life inspired the creation of the Marcus Graham Project - a nonprofit dedicated to inclusion in the fields of advertising and marketing).
Father of the Black Film explosion of the 1970s, legendary filmmaker
Melvin Van Peebles appears as a film editor

One of the things I don’t think Boomerang gets enough credit for is being a Black film that doesn’t center and prioritize whiteness. Unapologetically uninterested in the white gaze, Boomerang is set in a Black corporate world so alien and underrepresented on the screen that it strained credibility for many white viewers at the time (the only way some could process it at all was to convince themselves it was a fantasy). Boomerang is Black representation that's funny, funky, sexy, loving, and outrageous enough to be comfortable in its own skin. It foregoes the traditional crossover concerns of respectability politics, uplift roadmaps, and cultural identification signposts.
Director Reginald Hudlin (l.) and producer Warrington Hudlin appear as a couple
of street hustlers soliciting Marcus outside of the Apollo Theater. 
Based on a story idea by Eddie Murphy, Boomerang's screenplay is credited to SNL alumni and longtime Murphy collaborators Barry Blaustein & David Sheffield. In the 2003 book Why We Make Movies: Black Filmmakers Talk About the Magic of Cinema by George Alexander, producer Warrington Hudlin called the duo: "Two white writers who are on Hollywood welfare rolls who just keep getting money with no talent." Labeling the original screenplay for Boomerang "worthless," Hudlin credits the film's Black perspective as emanating from Murphy's original story and the widely-encouraged improvisational skills of the cast. 


It was nothing short of exhilarating for me to see myself and people I recognized in the film’s casual intersection of buppies & homies; hip-hop and R &B; urban sophisticates and “country” relatives; women in charge & sex-positivity feminism; Afrocentrism and Dolemite-level raunch.
I saw Boomerang on opening day July, 1st, 1992 with a friend of mine (now, ex-friend) who found the film profoundly insulting because she felt the absence of white characters in the film was an act of intentional hostility on the part of the filmmakers. Mind you, this was a white friend with whom I’d watched innumerable classic and contemporary movies with all-white casts with nary a peep out of her. Exposure to just ONE film with a prioritized Black gaze was enough to send her off the rails.
Tisha Campbell as Yvonne
Boomerang is killingly funny and ranks high on my absolute favorites chart, but it’s far from being a perfect film. I love how prominently women feature in the narrative and I’ve not one complaint with how they are characterized or depicted in the film (but I say that with the awareness that the almost 30-year-old film is the collaborative work of men, and that as a male myself, I am hardly the last word on the subject). But I personally could do without Eddie Murphy’s incessant need to assert his well-documented—since apologized for—homophobia (Good Lord…the man can’t even let a Frenchman platonically kiss him on the cheek!), and the scenes between Marcus and his buddies grow more cringe-worthy with each passing year (they trigger a lifetime’s memories of having to suffer the toxic masculinity byplay of barbershop talk).
Chris Rock as corporate gossip, Bony T
What lingers with me and what makes me understand how Boomerang has grown into a classic and cult favorite is that it’s a glimmering time capsule of Black culture, highlighting a vast cross-section of amazing Black artists. As a film, it’s a little piece of comic brilliance that shows its age in some respects but largely reveals how ahead of the curve it was in defining its point of view and depicting a side of Black life rarely seen on movie screens. The rare entertainment that succeeds in actually being entertaining, I champion Boomerang for its humor, its heart, its raunchy outrageousness, and especially for its refreshing vision of romance and Black lives lived in a glossy, stylishly old-fashioned Hollywood landscape.
And I Will Give U My Heart


BONUS MATERIAL

With eight weeks in the #1 spot on the R&B charts, the Boomerang soundtrack was a massive hit, with singles flooding the radio airwaves of 1992. To this day my personal fave track remains Grace Jones' "7 Day Weekend," A song that only appears instrumentally in the movie and for which Jones expressed little fondness in her memoirs, citing minimal creative input.

Boomerang introduced me to the magnificent work of African-American artist Romare Bearden (1911-1988). The above piece "Jammin ' at the Savoy" -1980, is featured in the scene where Angela teaches a children's art class.

Boomerang spawned a 2019 spin-off TV series produced by Halle Berry and written by Lena Waithe that ran for two seasons on BET. The show took place in modern-day Atlanta and had the adult daughter of Eddie Murphy & Halle Berry running her own advertising agency while being romantically pursued by the son of Robin Givens' character. The reversal of the premise had Marcus and Angela's daughter as the one afraid of commitment, while Jacqueline's son is the one looking to settle down.

Copyright © Ken Anderson  2009 - 2020

11 comments:

  1. This movie definitely got a raw deal at the time of its release. Looking at the reviews of the time, most of them are hyper focused on the perceived unreality of black urban professionals, while backhandedly praising the performances. I am glad it has been reappraised since.

    As usual, an excellent read.

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    1. Whym thank you so much, goregoregirl!
      You're so right. No comedy is everyone's cup of tea, but in reading over the reviews from 1992 in prepping this piece, I was struck by the importance of diversity in entertainment journalism. I've never read so many tone-deaf reviews about a film.
      I came away with a stronger sense of the critics themselves than the film they were reviewing. The consensus being:
      1. Unless it's in the context of suffering or racism, few critics know how to react to Black characters on the screen.
      2. Black female sexuality is scary.
      3. White film critics go around with serious preconceptions about the "reality" of Black lives.
      4. A lot of folks really don't like Eddie Murphy.

      Happily, the film found its audience almost from the start and it's reputation has only grown. I think it would have been a bigger one if critics at the time weren't so dedicated to venting their spleens at not seeing themselves represented in ONE major motion picture.

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    2. Agreed. There was a lot of people venting their personal ignorance and vendettas in the guise of journalism/film criticism.

      I've never been a romantic comedy sort (as my username attests), and even I can tell that Boomerang is several ranks smarter than most other genre examples, and is well cast across the board.

      I assume the heavy hate on Eddie Murphy was due to his enormous success at the time, with a splash of bog standard racism.

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  2. Dear Ken: Wow! I had no idea! I remember "Boomerang" playing in theatres in the early '90s (during one of my periodic times in life when I was out of touch with contemporary cinema). But all I remember hearing about was "enchanting newcomer" Halle Berry. I had no idea the movie had such a phenomenal cast!

    I may have to overcome my aversion to Eddie Murphy (started by seeing "Beverly Hills Cop" in its original release, although to be fair, it was the lazy movie that was to blame more than Murphy) and check it out. Your essay certainly convinces me that "Boomerang" is no sloppy and thoughtless Hollywood "product."

    Incidentally, have you heard anything about the new movie "Sylvie's Love"? It stars Tessa Thompson, who I've liked since seeing her in "Dear White People." I guess the movie is not yet in official release, since I found only one review on-line. But here's a link: https://www.rogerebert.com/sundance/sundance-2020-the-40-year-old-version-farewell-amor-sylvies-love The movie sounds like it could be right up my alley, and possibly yours!

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    1. Hi Dave
      I don't think a lot of folks know what a phenomenal gathering of talent BOOMERANG is. (Among those who do, the debate is often whether said talents were shown off to best advantage.)
      I don't think even I fully appreciated this amazing cast back in 1996. Now that so many have passed on, and others have gone on to become such major stars, BOOMERANG gains classic status merely from amassing a once-in-a-lifetime, who's-who roster of talent.
      The '90s Black film boom rattled a lot of critics who were ill-equipped to deal with the challenge films like BOOMERANG presented: That Blakness is not a monolith experience centered around the Hood or Hip Hop.

      I've really only come around to liking Eddie Murphy since DREAMGIRLS and especially DOLEMITE IS MY NAME. When BOOMERANG came out, It had been about 10 years since I saw a film of his (stopped seeing his films after 48 Hrs), having written him off after his savagely homophobic stand up comedy specials.
      I went to BOOMERANG exclusively for Grace Jones, Eartha Kitt, and Robin Givens. This was my first time ever seeing the beguiling Halle Berry. Murphy is fine in this because he's sort of the straight man and is very low key. The character he plays is kind of odious, so please don't rush into seeing this just because I happen to love it. Comedy is always so personal, and I happen to find the thoroughly off color dialogue hilarious in context of the film (it's played for cringe-comedy effect).
      By the way, if you romantic comedies, another one I dearly love is "Crossing Delancey" (1988) with Amy Irving and Peter Rigert. It's really delightful.
      I have put "Sylvie's Love" on my must-see list, having fell in love with Tessa Thompson in the sci-fi thriller ANNIHILATION. Thanks for bringing this new film to my attention, for it sounds rather remarkable (and I love the look of Douglas Sirk films). And like BOOMERANG, it sounds like it fills a void in Black Cinema-- quoting from a pre-review: "We deserve to ourselves happy and light as much as we deserve to see the darkness we have endured."
      Thanks for reading this and commenting, Dave. Always terrific hearing from you!

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  3. I'd like to echo your comment about "Crossing Delancey." It's a great romantic comedy firmly placed within a very specific cultural context. After reading your review, I can see the similarities with "Boomerang." I've not seen this film but I remember it coming out back when Eddie Murphy was at the top of his game. I'm not an "Eddie Murphy" hater (though I wouldn't say I'm a fan either) and some of his films are entertaining. The way you describe the other actors' performances makes the film more intriguing for me. I wonder if you have any particular opinions about Tyler Perry's films which also seem to come from a specific cultural place and seem very popular. I liked "The Family Who Preys" primarily because I liked Alfre Woodard and Kathy Bates. The couple of other films of his I've seen are not really my cup of tea.

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    1. Hi Ron - Glad to hear you're familiar with the marvelous "Crossing Delancey." Yes, good romantic comedies are hard to come by, but "Boomerang" and "Crossing Delancy" rank among my favorites, not least of all because of their cultural contexts.
      Eddie Murphy is an exasperating star to me for many reasons. He is undeniably gifted and talented, but enjoying his film work requires I turn off that part of my mind that has absorbed too many of his early career comedy material. But by teh same token I like what he tried to do with his film career (a Black romantic leading man) before getting derailed by all those kiddie movies and voiceover cartoons.

      As for Tyler Perry, I applaud his unprecedented success (which Hollywood seems to like ignoring), as I love that he provides work for underutilized Black talent. But I think he's a weak director and perhaps a terrible (and terribly prolific) writer.
      With his setup, he could greenlight the projects of many exceptional Black directors and writers. That he prides himself on doing everything may be good for his ego, but is bad art.
      I think of director William Castle and how close we all gt to suffering a ROSEMARY'S BABY directed and produced by HIM! A classic film was made because someone with vision was able to tell Castle that he should produce, but not direct that film. I think of all the magnificent films we're missing out on because there's no one to tell Perry that he just needs to hand the reins over to other people occasionally.

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  4. Hello,
    I remember seeing this film in the 1990's and I found it to be very entertaining and full of bright stars. It was great to see -apart from Eddie Murphy- Halle Berry, Grace Jones, Eartha Kitt and Robin Givens in the same film. So much star quality!! I remember that I thought that Robin Givens was hugely talented, a gifted comedienne and incredibly beautiful. She reminds me a little of Faye Dunaway with that kind of intensity and power. I thought that she would become a great star. The women in this film are more interesting than the men!

    This was a very funny and enjoyable movie that I'd like to watch again.
    with kind regards, Wille

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    1. Hello Wille!
      A real pleasure hearing form you again!

      I'm with you when you say the women in the cast are more interesting than the men. The glamour quotient is off the chart. No matter how much screen time they have Grace jones, Halle Berry, Eartha Kitt, and Robin Givens (who DOES have a Dunaway quality about her!) never seem to be on the screen enough for my taste.
      Glad to hear you find the film to be an enjoyable one. It's certainly has reminded a favorite of mine.
      Thank you for reading this and commenting, Wille! Hope all is well with you. Cheers!

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  5. Dear Ken: Hi!

    I just watched “Boomerang” for the first time this morning. And I'm so glad I did! It was smart, stylish, very funny, and quite subversive in its reversal of stereotypical gender roles. And as you say in your essay, the movie was completely unconcerned with pandering to the “white gaze,” a quality I found so refreshing. We need more movies like “Boomerang,” “Eve's Bayou,” “Something New,” “Dear White People,” “Sylvie's Love,” “Passing,” etc. that are Black art, created for Black audiences. And if a white viewer like me can find a connection with the movie, that's great—but that shouldn't be the primary goal!

    Saying more about the movie's subversive qualities: as you point out in your essay, there is a lot going on here with playing with conventional gender roles. I was surprised by how early in the movie the subversiveness starts, too! And it carries through right to the end, with “good girl” Angela (Berry) being just as empowered and sexually assertive as “bad girl” (who isn't really a “bad girl”) Jacqueline (Givens).

    The cast and performances were incredible! As you point out, only at this point in film history was it possible to gather together so many big stars, future stars, legendary veterans, etc. in one film. I think my favorite performances were by Givens and Grier. Givens displayed such incredible star quality—if she had been a white actress in the 1930s or 1940s, Hollywood would have created a whole series of star vehicles expressly for her. (Conversely, if she was starting out today, she might have been able to have the kind of career Tessa Thompson now is enjoying.) And although I suspect Grier has played the same type of role on other occasions, he was quite good. Some of his facial reactions during his confrontation scene with Murphy were pretty heartbreaking.

    I also have to say, the film was like a scrapbook of phenomenal female facial bone structure: Givens, Berry, Kitt, Rochon—and of course, Jones!

    Finally, the movie unexpectedly sent me on a wave of early 1990s nostalgia. The clothes, the glamorous locations, and (unexpectedly) the music. Contemporary music and I pretty much parted ways in the 1980s while I was in college. By the early 1990s, the only “new” music I was collecting were “Unforgettable” and the other jazz standard albums by Natalie Cole. So although I've certainly heard of Toni Braxton, Boyz II Men, etc. I'm not familiar with their work. But I liked what I heard on the movie soundtrack! I'll have to play it for the husband, since that was the era he began collecting music (he recently told me that the first CD he bought with his own money was CeCe Peniston's “We Got a Love Thang.”)

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    1. Hi David -
      How wonderful to hear you checked out this charming and romantic comedy and found it so much to your liking! Humor tends to be so personal that it’s always fruitless to recommend comedies to others, so I’m glad you happened upon it on your own.

      It’s good to read how you appreciated BOOMERANG representing the gaze and perspective of the Black filmmaker, and the contemporary examples you provide illustrate how dynamic films are when they’re representative of the gaze and worldview of the people making them (I see it in LGBTQ films as well),.

      In a cast as vast and talented as this, it’s no small compliment that you cite Givens and Greer as standouts. Both are so good. Greer is such a surprisingly effective dramatic actor (he’s great in Robert Altman’s STREAMERS) and Givens is pure star quality. She’s even more impressive (and lovelier, if possible) in the superb A RAGE IN HARLEM, a very funny movie that turns perhaps too dark for your taste by the 3rd act.

      I like that you responded to the film’s often cleverly subversive twists on gender stereotypes, and laughed in appreciation at your taking note of the flawless female bone structure of the women. So true!!

      What with the soundtrack sparking your memories of the music of the ‘90s, I’d say that BOOMERANG was a pleasant experience all around. I’m happy you liked it, but I’m more thrilled that you thought to revisit the site and share the experience here. I loved every minute reading it,
      Much appreciated, David!

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