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Genres:
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Drama /
Music /
Music
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Release:
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Director:
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Craig Brewer
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Actors:
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Christina Ricci,
Leonard L. Thomas,
Adriane Lenox,
Clare Grant,
Michael Raymond-James,
Neimus K. Williams,
Ruby Wilson,
Claude Phillips,
Amy Lavere,
Samuel L. Jackson,
Justin Timberlake,
S. Epatha Merkerson,
John Cothran Jr.,
David Banner,
Kim Richards
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Duration:
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116 min.
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Rating:
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(7.1/10)132
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Plot Summary:
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In rural Mississippi, Lazarus, a former blues musician who survives by way of truck agriculture, finds a young girl nearly beaten to death near his emphasize. She's the white-balderdash town tramp, molded by means of a life of physical misemploy at the hands of her invent and said corruption from her mother, who seems to delight in reminding Rae of her misconception in not aborting her. Lazarus, who is also facing offensive danger at the dissolution of his integration, nurses Rae back to health, providing her with smooth, fatherly opinion as well as an upbringing in blues music. Rae's boyfrie... nd, Ronnie, goaded by the restrain who exactly beat Rae to death, misunderstands the relationship between Lazarus and Rae, and vows to kill him. Lazarus, exhibiting a street-smart discernment of violence and its motives, calls Ronnie's blind, senses that he is as troubled as Rae, and becomes a guiding force in the young couple's resurrection.
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Tags:
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Black Snake Moan
Samuel L. Jackson and Christina Ricci star in this drama about a God-fearing bluesman and a wild young woman.
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Black Snake Moan
I think its totally possible that Christina Ricci misheard her agent or something and thought she signed up for an...
Black Snake Moan
The Deep South, to paraphrase LP Hartley, is a foreign country. They do things differently there. Drinking moonshine, neglecting to learn how to read, fearing God and having sex with family members. All these, for some reason, spring to mind. Local boy Craig Brewer received Oscar-shaped acclaim for his indigenous pimp-daddy film Hustle & Flow, but this horrendously overheated melodrama quickly buckles under the weight of two cardinal mistakes. We all know white men can't jump, but on this evidence they shouldn't try to make convincing films about black men or fallen women either. Lazarus (Jackson) and Rae (Ricci) have one thing in common: they both apply a scorched-earth policy to rejection. Abandoned by his wife, Lazarus drives a tractor ov...
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