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Martin Ritt (
Hud) directed this wonderful 1972 drama about a family of African American sharecroppers in rural Louisiana during the Great Depression. When the father is sent to jail for stealing food to feed his family, the others regroup in order to survive. Cicely Tyson brings grace and strength to her role, and director Martin Ritt pushes the story well past nostalgia toward an understated but obvious look at burgeoning self-determination among blacks (even the roots of future militancy). If Ritt, a white director, can't get any closer to the characters' experience than he already does, he is still a fine storyteller and this is a terrific tale.
--Tom Keogh
From Parents' Choice®
Far better than the celebrated book it's based on, this film has become a picture of the economic depression of the 1930's South. There was never enough to eat; there were not enough jobs; black people had separate churches, drinking fountains, and toilets. But many, many retained human kindness, understanding and a love that comes through deep suffering. Amazingly, there was also light-heartedness and laughter. The setting is part of our national history, but coming close to it, face to face, as we do in this film, helps us vow we must not allow such hate history to repeat itself. It is a mesmerizing film. A Parents' Choice Approval. (Diana Huss Green, Parents' Choice, 1999)