Lee Daniels' The Butler | Film Reviews | Salt Lake City Weekly

Lee Daniels' The Butler 

A director earns his credit in the messy, emotional Lee Daniels' The Butler

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Lee Daniels' The Butler
  • Lee Daniels' The Butler

Thanks to a lawsuit challenging The Weinstein Company’s right to use the title The Butler—one that, depending on your sympathies, is either “protecting intellectual property” or “typical petty Hollywood dick-swinging”—the full, official title is now Lee Daniels’ The Butler. And even if the director’s name is unfamiliar to you, you may realize by the end why auteurist credit is so appropriate for this movie.

Lee Daniels, you see, is not a subtle filmmaker. Best known for the Oscar-winning misery-wallow Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire, Daniels also oversaw 2012’s swampy, fairly demented adaptation of Pete Dexter’s The Paperboy, which became infamous for a tender moment in which Nicole Kidman saves Zac Efron’s life from jellyfish stings by peeing all over his face. Call it a special gift for picking source material, but Daniels has seemed to understand where his distinctive brand of visual too-much might actually be just right.

He’s at it again with this loose adaptation of the life story of former White House butler Eugene Allen, turned here into a fellow named Cecil Gaines (Forest Whitaker). Born on a Georgia plantation in 1918, Cecil witnesses the sexual abuse of his mother and the murder of his father at the hands of the plantation’s white owner before eventually learning how to be an effective house servant—that “the room should feel empty when you’re in it.” His ability to avoid conflicts and please people catches the eye of a White House staff recruiter, who brings Cecil on during the Eisenhower administration, beginning service that would take him into the Reagan years.

Daniels and screenwriter Danny Strong—who handled political history in the HBO films Recount and Game Change—focus largely on the dynamics within the Gaines family, yielding an odd mixed bag of results. The conflict between Cecil and his oldest son, Louis (David Ayelowo)—who becomes first a Martin Luther King Jr.-following nonviolent protester, and eventually a Black Panther—becomes a filter for the entirety of the civil rights-era philosophical battle between assimilation and agitation; the battles with alcoholism of Cecil’s wife, Gloria (Oprah Winfrey), serve as little more than melodramatic fodder for “you care more about your job than you care about us” material. The domestic tensions are familiar, the competent execution resting largely on the shoulders of the solidly effective Whitaker and the increasingly “I need to see everything this guy does” Ayelowo.

Yet there’s also an unavoidable collision between this story’s sense of self-importance and Daniels’ oddball choices. It’s frustrating enough at times to find the narrative zipping through and name-checking crucial historical moments—it sometimes feels like Forest Whitaker Gump—just because there’s so much ground to cover. But then there are the stunt-casting choices for the various presidents with whom Cecil interacts, ranging from the perfectly satisfactory (James Marsden as John F. Kennedy) to the thoroughly distracting (John Cusack as Nixon; Robin Williams as Eisenhower).

And there’s the cross-cutting between Cecil’s white-glove service and Louis being abused during a lunch counter sit-in, which runs far beyond the point where the juxtaposing point is made. And there are casual moments between the Gaines and their friends and neighbors, which at times feel refreshingly not plot-driven, and at times just plain unnecessary. It’s a sprawling, messy, sporadically effective treatment of a difficult subject by a director who lives and breathes in a sprawling, messy,
sporadically effective creative place.

If there’s any way Lee Daniels’ The Butler is likely to divide viewers, however, it’s in the way the narrative builds to Barack Obama’s election in 2008. Within the context of the film, it becomes the grand culmination of the entire civil rights movement—which is bound to drive some people absolutely crazy, even as Daniels and Strong convey how powerful this moment could be to black Americans born during the era of Jim Crow, to veterans of marches and unfair jailings, to so many who dreamed but perhaps never truly believed America could reach that point during their lifetime. Perhaps if Daniels had stayed focused on this emotional arc of history, rather than funky distractions and over-the-top visual moments, he could have nailed this story. But then again, if that were true, it probably wouldn’t be Lee Daniels’ The Butler.

LEE DANIELS’ THE BUTLER

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Forest Whitaker, David Ayelowo, Oprah Winfrey
Rated PG-13

Twitter: @ScottRenshaw

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Scott Renshaw

Scott Renshaw

Bio:
Scott Renshaw has been a City Weekly staff member since 1999, including assuming the role of primary film critic in 2001 and Arts & Entertainment Editor in 2003. Scott has covered the Sundance Film Festival for 25 years, and provided coverage of local arts including theater, pop-culture conventions, comedy, literature,... more

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