Rating: PG
Genre:
Drama
Release Date: 01/12/1999
Dubbed: English
Flags: Adult Situations, Questionable for Children
Distributor/Studio: Republic Pictures
Actor
Tim Reid (
WKRP in Cincinnati) made his directorial debut with this filmed adaptation of
Clifton L. Taulbert's autobiography. Set in an African-American community in the segregated South,
Once Upon a Time...When We Were Colored follows a young
Taulbert through three decades, beginning with his birth in a cotton field in 1946. As he grows up,
Taulbert is faced with the harsh realities of being black in the mid-20th century: first from the lessons of his great-grandfather (
Al Freeman Jr.), later in his trips to the local segregated library, and finally in 1962, when a 16-year-old
Taulbert watches as his community deals with a racist white business owner trying to run a local black ice man out of town.
Once Upon a Time...When We Were Colored was the recipient of the Audience Choice Award at the
1995 St. Louis International Film Festival.
~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide
Unfailingly earnest,
Tim Reid's
Once Upon a Time . . . When We Were Colored can't help but be a bit square in its execution. This doesn't mean it isn't worth watching -- just that a viewer should not expect a quick pace, nor a particularly satisfying story arc. A former actor,
Reid shows his heavy hand in every scene, while
Phill Lewis' overly academic narration (scripted by
Paul W. Cooper) breaks the spell of the narrative each time it intrudes. These decisions firmly entrench the film in the realm of sepia-toned docudrama, when it could have been told like rousing historical fiction. Even the sources of conflict have no bite. The film shies away from controversy, portraying the white oppressors with a dispiriting level of political correctness. This leaves the ugliness of racism largely buried, existing subliminally in the characters' declarations that they "need to get out of this town," without providing a clear sense what's motivating that impulse. Further lessening the film's emotional impact, it doesn't focus on any one character for any length of time. Even though it's an adaptation of
Clifton Taulbert's autobiography, his character is only the protagonist in fits and starts. The rest of the time, the narrative wanders to focus on other characters, frequently dramatizing events at which Clifton was not present, which makes their veracity seem suspect. It's unfortunate that a review of
Once Upon a Time . . . When We Were Colored features such a litany of complaints that must seem middling, in light of what it's trying to be: a well-meaning portrait of childhood in the segregated South. But movies cannot be rubber-stamped merely for their good intentions, and
Reid's film lacks the propulsion to be as riveting or important as it could have been.
~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide