Offering a potent alternative to the
stereotypical content in blaxploitation films, a handful of serious dramas with
primarily African-American casts were released in the ’70s, including Black Girl (1972), Claudine (1974), and this adaptation of a Tony-winning play by
Joseph A. Walker. Originally presented in New York by the progressive Negro
Ensemble Company, The River Niger is
intense and political but loaded with so many hot-button signifiers that, seen
today, it seems a bit more like a highlight reel of the Black Power movement
than a proper drama. Walker crams in Afrocentrism, Black Panther-style
militarized activism, the resentment felt by black Vietnam veterans, the
ravages of alcoholism among urban African-Americans, and myriad other
incendiary topics. Thus, even though the story pulls these threads together,
more or less, by focusing on the troubles that plague a single black family, The River Niger feels episodic and
pretentious, as if Walker felt compelled to address every single subject that
was important to African-Americans during the early ’70s.
In the broadest
stokes, the movie depicts what happens the week that Vietnam vet Jeff Williams
(Glynn Turman) comes home from the war to his family in Los Angeles. Jeff’s
father, Jonny (James Earl Jones), is a drunk who dabbles in writing poetry;
Jeff’s mother, Mattie (Cicely Tyson), is a strong matriarch trying to prevent
her loved ones from learning she has cancer; and Jeff’s friend, Big Moe Hayes
(Roger E. Mosley), is a militant caught up in an ongoing hassle with the LAPD.
Suffice to say, tensions are as plentiful as plotlines. Combined with narrative-flow
problems in the screen version (also written by Walker), this kitchen-sink
approach to dramaturgy makes The River
Niger a tough film to slog through. Worst among the narrative-flow problems
is Walker’s inability to command pacing and tone; the movie jumps abruptly from
intense scenes to light ones, and Walker misses myriad opportunities to group
similar scenes together and/or use cross-cutting to create dramatic
counterpoint. Director Krishna Shah seems equally adrift, occasionally using
interesting devices—flash cuts of African masks, a striking camera angle
looking over the barrel of a gun—without ever locking into a consistent style.
Even the acting, by a cast of normally reliable performers, is inconsistent.
Jones has many beautiful moments, especially when reciting poetry, but his
belligerent-drunk bits get tiresome. Tyson, perpetually and rightly cast as personifications
of principle, is formidable but humorless. Turman, at his best when loosest, is
tight in the extreme, delivering rigid body language and stilted line
deliveries. Even the always-interesting Louis Gossett Jr. is merely okay,
playing the family’s doctor with a campy Jamaican accent. Holding the film
together, to some degree, is a funk/R&B score by one of the quintessential
’70s bands, War, though none of their melodies connect as strongly as their
loping grooves.
The
River Niger: FUNKY
too bad "The Gods Must be Crazy" was made in 1980!
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