Proud (film) explained

Proud
Director:Mary Pat Kelly
Producer:Ally Hilfiger
Starring:Ossie Davis
Stephen Rea
Aidan Quinn
Music:Tasso Zapanti
Cinematography:Thom Marini
Editing:David Kausch
H. Spencer Young
Studio:THEntertainment
Distributor:Castle Hill Productions
Runtime:87 minutes
Country:United States
Language:English

Proud is a 2004 film directed by Mary Pat Kelly and stars veteran actor and activist Ossie Davis, in his final film performance.[1] The motion picture was filmed in Elmira NY and Buffalo, NY.[2] The screenplay was written by Kelly based on her non-fiction book Proudly We Served (1999).[3]

Proud was an Official Selection of The Third Annual Buffalo International Film Festival in 2009. Mary Pat Kelly and Lorenzo Dufau (last surviving crew member) introduced the screening.

Premise

The film focuses on the meritorious service of the USS Mason (DE-529) of World War II, the first US Navy ship with a predominantly African American crew, and how three of the men were finally honored in January 1994 for their meritorious service.

Cast

Reception

Critical response

When the film was released Ronnie Scheib, film critic at Variety magazine, gave the film a mixed review, writing, "A weird hodgepodge, Proud is part history lesson, part family saga, a lyrical nod to the Old Sod, a Navy recruitment flag-waver and a war actioner. Earnest, intermittently rousing pic, skedded for a fall opening, should coast on Davis' masterful performance before being archived by cable for suitable occasions...Pic's overall structure is determined both by Davis' narration and by the presence of black war correspondent Thomas Young (Darnell Williams), who was assigned to cover the Mason. His frequent to-the-camera interviews with sailors abstractly punctuate the film, creating a broader sociological framework...Aside from generally excellent combat scenes, pic is uneven. The bigoted animosity of a petty officer, for instance, or the Admiral's dismissal of the captain's praise of his crew's valor as exaggeration unfold with the leaden sententiousness of a grade-school pageant."[4]

Critic Marcia Davis with The Washington Post wrote, "The high purpose of Proud is not matched by the film's execution, however. It's worth seeing, but don't go expecting a traditional Hollywood feature film. It is rather oddly executed and uneven, unlike the well-known and controversial Glory, which won Denzel Washington his first Oscar, or the brilliant A Soldier's Story, adapted from Charles Fuller's A Soldier's Play. Proud is something of a hybrid, part documentary -- with actual footage from the Mason -- and part dramatization. It is at times deeply poignant when it talks about the longing of black men to be treated as men and what they went through to prove their worthiness. It can also be a bit of an unrestrained flag-waver on black American patriotism."[5]

Accolades

Nominated

Distribution

Film festivals

Notes and References

  1. .
  2. .
  3. Kelly, Mary Pat. Proudly We Served. United States Naval Institute 220pp, September 1999.
  4. https://www.variety.com/review/VE1117927696?refcatid=31 Scheib, Ronnie
  5. https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/22/AR2005092202073.html Davis, Marcia