
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
|
||
|
||
DEAN & DELUCA - Purveyors of Fine Food, Wine and Kitchenware
|
Everyday People is an ensemble piece centered
on Raskin's, a long established Jewish diner in a part of Brooklyn now more populated by
Blacks than by Jews. While, in the real world, serious conflict between Black and Jewish
communities in Brooklyn has been the stuff of headlines, here there's a sense of the
classic melting pot, of people living and working side-by-side. At the same time, director
Jim Mckay (Our Song) drops just
enough ethnic slurs into the dialogue to dispel any idea that some sort of ideal community
has been achieved. New Yorkers learn to accommodate to diversity, but ingrained prejudices
endure.
McKay, who developed his screenplay in part out of a workshop for
potential actors in the film, uses the crisis created by the imminent sale of Raskin's to
real estate developers to explore the lives of a variety of the employees and neighborhood
characters. Of the central characters, six are Black, two are Jewish, and one is a white
woman with a mixed race child.
Ira (Jonathan Gelber), the owner of the restaurant, has been watching
business decline as the neighborhood has deteriorated. The opportunity to sell out for a
good price is hard to refuse, especially under pressure from his father, who was the boss
before he retired. Ira also feels a sense of responsibility to his employees, most of
whom will have difficulty finding other work, but he doesn't have the backbone to let them
know about the imminent closing himself and lets the Black manager of the diner make the
announcement to a meeting of the staff.
Among the best realized characters is Joleen (Bridget Barkan), the
cashier, a single mother, a white woman who is into Black men. McKay gives a sense of her
harried life, holding down her job where she occasionally has to deal with abusive
customers, finding friends to take care of her son while she's at work. City-wise, but
sensitive, Joleen is in an uphill struggle that is seriously threatened if she loses her
job. Her friends are trying to convince her to work at the strip club where they earn more
in a few hours than she does in a week.
Samel (Billoah Greene) is headed for college (Howard, not
Harvard, he points out at one point). Raised by a white foster-mother, she's urging him to
reconnect with his long-estranged father, a painful prospect for Samel, but evidently
necessary so that his foster mother can adopt him legally.
Erin (Sydnee Stewart) is from the Black middle class. Her mom (Iris
Little-Thomas) is in management with Banana Republic, ambitious for herself and for her
daughter. But Erin has quit college and wants only to write rap poetry. She has found her
passion and neither mother nor her white writing teacher can convince her of the
impossibility of earning a living as a poet. A confrontation between mother and daughter
is one of the more effective scenes in the film.
Other characters are less successfully realized--an officious Black
political activist with a bad attitude, the Jewish dishwasher bitter over his past
mistakes, the black real estate developer who is pushing the deal to buy Raskin's. While
there are some scenes, typically of interaction between two of the players, that are
touching and incisive, McKay never brings it all together into a cohesive dramatic whole.
As in Our Song, he introduces appealing and interesting characters, but he
spreads his film too thinly over too many of them, resulting in sketches, rather than
portraits. The points are made, but they skim over the emotional surface and, since not
enough is ever known about any one of the characters, it's impossible to respond to them
with deep feeling. McKay also fails to avoid the sense of too deliberate patterning--the
characters seem a schematic group, each drawn to make a particular point about racial or
economic or family relationships. For effective drama, the points should grow out of
strong characters, not the other way around.
McKay does achieve a strong sense of place in Everyday People--the
neighborhood, the diner, the general milieu. All catch a distinctive New York tone. And,
to its credit, the film has a more polished look than did Our Song. If only McKay
would aim for more focused character development, his demonstrated skills might add up to
some terrific movies.
- Arthur Lazere