Ragtime
The passion, the violence, the birth of America’s gilded age.
In the early 1900s, a well-to-do family in New Rochelle, New York agrees to care for an abandoned black baby that, it turns out, belongs to a washwoman; later, the stubbornly proud father (Howard E. Rollins, Jr.) makes himself known. Adapting E.L. Doctorow’s sprawling novel would always be a challenge and the filmmakers have made tough decisions as to what to cut out. The film may not rise to the level of the author’s ambitions, but its focus on social injustice nevertheless makes for a very dramatic story. The lavish period details are convincing and Randy Newman’s score helps recreate the era. A dignified final appearance by James Cagney; Rollins, Jr. gives a strong performance.
1981-U.S. 155 min. Color. Widescreen. Produced by Dino De Laurentiis. Directed by Milos Forman. Screenplay: Michael Weller. Novel: E.L. Doctorow. Cinematography: Miroslav Ondricek. Music: Randy Newman. Song: “One More Hour” (Randy Newman). Cast: James Cagney (Rhinelander Waldo), Elizabeth McGovern (Evelyn Nesbit), Howard E. Rollins, Jr. (Coalhouse Walker, Jr.), Mary Steenburgen, James Olson, Brad Dourif… Mandy Patinkin, Donald O’Connor, Pat O’Brien, Debbie Allen, Jeff Daniels, Samuel L. Jackson, Fran Drescher.
Trivia: Later a Broadway musical. Daniels’s first film. Robert Altman was allegedly first hired as director.
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milos forman milos forman james cagney james cagney IMDb
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