I made this film in 1989. The other day, a technician at a lab and I were chatting about it, and he asked to see it. He's 26, African American, grew up in the projects and made his way to LA. I gave him a copy and he raved about it; he wants to show it to his church, he wants to show it to his pastor father in law; he wants everyone in his life to see it. Needless to say, I was moved. Twenty years ago, a group of people came together to make a little fable about capitalism, about how hard it was for a woman to become a soybean trader at the Chicago board of trade, about racism. The cast includes the amazing Danitra Vance (Colored Girls on Broadway in the 70's), who plays the guardian angel of Nancy Allen. Ray Charles plays God. It's a paean to Chicago, an homage to the soybean pit where my brother toiled for many years. The original cast was Daymon Wayans and Sharon Stone, but the producer wouldn't let me cast them. Either way, it's a PG13 family flick, Brad Hall, Ron Howard's dad Rance are hilarious - Dean Stockwell, Nancy Allen are a hoot - "cornball" as Ebert puts it, but hey, something to be said for the only film ever made about soybean trading.. I still have no idea why anyone would hate this film. Entertainment Weekly gave it a B+ - but sadly, it's disappeared into the great cinema vault in the sky.
Here's a clip I put on youtube of Danitra and Ray in the final scene, sadly, both not on the planet anymore:
Here's a clip from the ending with Danitra and Ray:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhQzQ3opivE
Here's the Entertainment Weekly Review:
Here's a clip I put on youtube of Danitra and Ray in the final scene, sadly, both not on the planet anymore:
Here's a clip from the ending with Danitra and Ray:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zhQzQ3opivE
Here's the Entertainment Weekly Review:
VIDEO REVIEW