The Watermelon Woman, written and directed by Cheryl Dunye, is about a young black female film maker based in Philadelphia (also Dunye) who goes in search of information on a black actress famed for her roles in Hollywood in the 30s, as she hopes to make a documentary about her. During her search she also meets and falls deeply .. Read more
| Starring | Cheryl Dunye, Guinevere Turner, Camille Paglia, Lisa Marie Bronson |
|---|---|
| Director | Cheryl Dunye |
| Genres | Drama, Gay/Lesbian, Romance |
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The Watermelon Woman, written and directed by Cheryl Dunye, is about a young black female film maker based in Philadelphia (also Dunye) who goes in search of information on a black actress famed for her roles in Hollywood in the 30s, as she hopes to make a documentary about her. During her search she also meets and falls deeply in love with a beautiful woman (Guinevere Turner)...
| Starring | Cheryl Dunye, Guinevere Turner, Camille Paglia, Lisa Marie Bronson, Cheryl Clarke, Brian Freeman |
|---|---|
| Director | Cheryl Dunye |
| Studio | PECCADILLO PICTURES |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 20 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama, Gay/Lesbian, Romance |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Hearing-impaired | English |
| Released | DVD: 10 Mar 2003 Production year: 1996 |
| Format | DVD |
It might have won the Teddy Bear for the best gay film at the 1996 Berlin festival, but Cheryl Dunye's fictional documentary is too inward-looking for its own good. Hollywood's denial of opportunity to black (let alone gay and lesbian) performers in the 1930s and 1940s is certainly a topic worthy of discussion. But Dunye's pursuit of the watermelon woman, a character actress she keeps spotting in old Hollywood movies, gets tangled up too often in her relationships with her closest friend and a new white lover. Moreover, the camera work is fussy and the satire is too self-congratulatory. However, there is an insightful glimpse of controversial academic Camille Paglia in action.
"...[A] wry and exhilarating comedy, at once romantic and sharply observant....Dunye has much to express, and she does it with humor, energy, wit, passion and perception..."
Abysmal film.
Script is beyond poor (and not what I expect at all) and not intelligent at all.
Plot DRAGS like it's going through tar.
Terrible acting (it's almost as if this is cutting room material)
There is NO chemistry between anyone in the movie and do NOT bother if you want to see a sex/hot scene - for that rent: Bound, Femme Fatale, Listen, Desert Hearts, Claire of The Moon, Gia (with Angelina Jolie doing what she does best) or Lost and Delirious...
Total rubbish.
I dont know why Im bothering to put to paper to describe such a dull film, except to warn others off. I can see the point of this film, but really it says all you need to know on the label. Perhaps worthy of an art school project, but god knows why anyone thought this served more general release. If better made, maybe worth putting on as a late night BBC2/C4 documentary. I have to admit I ordered this on the expectation of seeing some flesh, but the cover picture is about as much as you get to see! Apparently a senator was shocked by the level of nudity, but if I were him Id be asking for my (i.e. taxpayers) money back for the lack of it! Of course it always helps to have a politician complaining about such films to stir up some publicity no doubt the producers took advantage of this!