Skeletons Galore in
Dysfunctional Family Drama Film Review by Kam
Williams
When Carmel Boxer (Gabrielle Union) passed away, almost all of her
extended family willingly descended upon their sleepy hometown of
Huntsville, Alabama for her funeral. The only holdout was her brother
Helms (Billy Dee Williams), an embittered expatriate living in Paris.
Helms had to be tricked into believing his sister had already been
buried before he would return to his roots. Why? Because he had made
such a mess of his life by the time he left there. He had grown up
during the days of segregation and had dared to date and then even to
wed a white woman. And though that marriage to Nancy (Leslie Ann Warren)
would not last, it did at
least produce an estranged, café au lait daughter in Lucy (Melissa de
Sousa).
His second marriage, to Jenita (Rae Dawn Chong), a black woman, didn’t
last either, it did happen to produce another offspring, namely,
relatively well-adjusted Rosa (Zoe Saldana). If this scenario doesn’t
sound like enough of a soap opera, also back in town is Lucy’s white
husband, Kent (Alec
Newman), and Rosa’s black ex-boyfriend, Errol (Hill Harper), who cheated
on her with her white best friend, Celeste (Ever Carradine).
And wouldn’t you know it, Celeste is the niece of Bear (David Clennon)
who just wished he had had the strength a half century before to propose
to the
love of his life, the dearly-departed Carmel. But because he never
summoned the gumption to cross the color line, he was fated to be
plagued by overwhelming regret to this very day.
So, you’ll need a scorecard to keep the players straight in
Constellation, a distinctly disappointing sophomore effort by
writer/director Jordan Walker-Pearlman, whose impressive debut, The
Visit had landed high atop this Critic’s Top Ten List for 2000. Here, he
taps several of the same actors
(Harper, Chong, Clennon and Williams), but in service of a decidedly
inferior gabfest.
This overplotted, emotional dump plods along as if the characters are
stuck in the cinematic equivalent of quicksand, never generating any
traction because no matter how much everybody vents, nothing of
consequence ever transpires. Walker-Pearlman apparently bit off more
than he could chew, for this rudderless production lacks the coherence
to see it as a finished feature film.
Yet that doesn’t stop Constellation from purporting to deliver a
message, that “You love the people who love you back.” Well, the same
goes for flicks, and this one doesn’t show much love.
Fair (1 star)
Rated PG-13 for brief profanity and a sexual reference.
Running time: 96 minutes
Studio: Codeblack Entertainment