Posts tagged Lee Daniels
Mo’Nique Wins Best Supporting Actress Golden Globe
Jan 17th
Kudos to Mo’Nique for her big win. Her role in the movie Precious was phenomenal and she deserved to win! Her acceptance speech was moving and heart felt. Check it out below:
Sphere: Related ContentFirst let me say, thank you, God, for this amazing ride that you’re allowing me to go on.
Everybody kept asking me do I know my speech, and I said, ‘No, I don’t know what I’m going to say because I don’t want people to think I just know I done won something,’ so no, I don’t know! But I am shaking when I tell you all I am in the midst of my dream and when I look into the eyes of the man I stood next to at 14 years old and I said to him, ‘One day we’re going to be stars, and he said, ‘You first. And we walked this red carpet together tonight. Sidney, I will love you more than you will ever know, baby.
Lee Daniels, the world gets a chance to see how brilliant you are. You are a brilliant, fearless, amazing director who would not waver, and thank you for trusting me. To Gabby, sister, I am in awe of you. Thank you for letting me play with you.
I celebrate this award with all the Precious’, with all the Mary’s — I celebrate this award with every person that’s ever been touched. It’s now time to tell. And it’s okay.
Hollywood Screening of ‘Precious’ at AFI Fest 2009 Photos
Nov 2nd
The American Film Institute (AFI) held a screening of “Precious: Based on the Novel Push by Sapphire” in Los Angeles Sunday night at the annual AFI Fest. The film’s stars and other actors came out to support the film last night at the Chinese Theatre. The film is full of fresh faced newcomers including the lead, Gabourey “Gabby” Sidibe and Xosha Roquemore (NYU Alumnus). ‘Precious‘ hits theaters Nov. 6.
Check out the pictures:
NYTimes Magazine Spotlight on the movie “Precious”
Oct 25th
“Precious,” is coming to theaters Nov. 6, the movie is said to be a vivid and dynamic depiction of the novel PUSH by Sapphire. The film was featured in an NYTimes Magazine, here are some highlights:
“Precious,” the harrowing story of a 350-pound illiterate teenage girl who is pregnant for the second time by her father and horribly abused by her mother, is shot in an almost-documentary style interspersed with fantasy sequences. Like most independent films, it is character-driven, and at its heart is a spirit of understanding. When Precious’s plight lands her in a special school, she blossoms: the audience’s initial rejection of Precious, even repulsion at the sight of her, slowly gives way to a kind of identification.
The Story vs. The Movie:Just a few months before its premiere at Cannes, “Precious” won three awards at the Sundance Film Festival, including a special jury prize for Mo’Nique, who plays Precious’s monstrous mother. Graphic as the film is, it is less so than “Push,” the 1996 novel on which it is based. Written by an African-American poet and writer known as Sapphire, “Push” relied on intentionally misspelled, broken and slangy English to convey Precious’s sense of despair and rage. The novel mixes poems by Precious with sexually extreme scenes, like those in which she is forced to perform oral sex on her mother. It is almost relentlessly bleak: when Precious discovers she is H.I.V.-positive, she is certain of her imminent death. Daniels’s movie, by contrast, offers a greater sense of possibility. He doesn’t ignore her disease, hardships or struggles, but he also liberates her from them. Precious is a stand-in for anyone — black, white, male, female — who has ever been devalued or underestimated.
The Trailer:
**Shout out to Ms. Fluorescent Beige, Rockstar Xosha**





















