An earnest exploration of
problems bedeviling America’s inner cities, A Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a Sandwich was
adapted from the noted Alice Childress novel of the same name. Put bluntly, the
story doesn’t work in terms of cinematic narrative, because Childress, who also
wrote the screenplay, failed to define the central focus, thereby falling into
the myriad traps of episodic structuring. Is the movie about a young man’s
descent into heroin addiction? Is it about that same young man’s fraught
relationship with his mother’s boyfriend, a stand-up guy who struggles to break
through the protagonist’s youthful arrogance? Or is the story about the
difficulties that the protagonist’s mother and teachers face when trying to
instill a sense of cultural pride and personal purpose, despite the bleak
milieu of life in South Central Los Angeles? The answer to all of these
questions is “yes,” and that’s the problem—with rare exceptions, the trick to
adapting novels for the screen involves peeling away subplots and themes until
only the core story remains, giving filmmakers the tools they need to create
onscreen momentum. That didn’t happen here. So, while a great deal of what
happens in A Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a
Sandwich is believable and poignant, the parts never cohere into a potent
statement.
The main character is Benjie (Larry B. Scott), a teenager caught
between good and bad influences. On the good side, he’s got his stalwart
mother, Sweets (Cicely Tyson); her boyfriend, Butler (Paul Winfield); and an
Afrocentric schoolteacher, Nigeria (Glynn Turman), who encourages Benjie’s
nascent writing ability. On the bad side are various neighborhood lowlifes,
including the dealers who draw Benjie into heroin use. While the scenes of
Benjie injecting himself are bracing, they feel a bit disconnected from the
rest of the story until the second half of the picture, which focuses on
Benjie’s attempt to kick his deadly habit. Similarly, it’s unclear that the
movie’s most important relationship is the one between Benje and Butler until
very close to the end of the movie, when Winfield’s intense work raises the
dramatic quality of A Hero Ain’t Nothin’
but a Sandwich to a level suiting the seriousness of the subject matter.
A Hero Ain’t Nothin’ but a Sandwich: FUNKY
Feels like an extended After School Special. Flat and dully earnest.
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