Lee Daniels, director of the Oscar-nominated "Precious" and most recently "The Paperboy," returns to theaters this weekend with "Lee Daniels' The Butler," starring Forest Whitaker and Oprah Winfrey. Loosely
based on the real-life story of Eugene Allen, who worked as a White
House butler under eight different presidents, the film follows
Whitaker's Cecil Gaines from his childhood on a cotton plantation to his
tenure at America's most famed address, tackling issues like racism and
infidelity along the way.
The Story
"Inspiring if not inspired, 'Lee Daniels' The Butler' is a sort of Readers' Digest
overview of the 20th century American civil rights movement centered on
an ordinary individual with an extraordinary perspective. This
fictionalized account of a Southern black man who worked as a White
House butler under seven presidents from Eisenhower to Reagan is a very
middle-of-the-road movie politically and aesthetically with myriad
issues to carp about. But the long arc of this man's story, which begins
in a Georgia cotton field and ends with an invitation back to his
longtime work place to meet the first black president of the United
States, describes a personal, racial and national journey in a way that
is quite moving and will have a powerful effect on all manner of
audiences, with the presumed exception of highbrows and real leftists." —
Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter
Whitaker And Winfrey
"Whitaker works beautifully with Oprah Winfrey as Gloria, Cecil's
not-so-dutiful wife. Gloria sublimates her frustration over her
husband's 24/7 devotion to the Oval Office by finding sham solace in
booze and a sleazy affair with a neighbor (Terrence Howard). Winfrey is a
full-throttle wonder, filling her role with heart soul and a healing
resilience. It's Gloria who tries to give Cecil common ground with their
two sons, neatly divided in their politics." — Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
The Message
"But it is important to emphasize that 'The Butler,' unlike almost every
other movie about race in America, is not primarily about the moral
awakening of white people. Nor does it neatly divide whites into
snarling bigots and paragons of tolerance. There are certainly instances
of raw prejudice and of sincere decency, but the presidents are complex
and contradictory creatures. Lyndon B. Johnson (Liev Schreiber) spews
racial slurs even as he prepares to sign the most sweeping civil rights
legislation since Lincoln. Ronald Reagan (Alan Rickman) treats the black
White House staff more fairly than any of his predecessors — his wife,
Nancy (yes, that is Jane Fonda) invites Cecil to a state dinner — but
fails to grasp the moral enormity of South African apartheid. They all
appreciate Cecil's service without ever quite seeing him fully as a
person." — A.O. Scott, New York Times
All Those Cameos
"A revolving door of stars in quasi-cameos takes the audience out of the
movie. Viewers will find themselves musing, 'Wow, Jane Fonda really
looks like Nancy Reagan!' and 'Who knew Robin Williams could look so
much like Eisenhower?" or 'Wait, was that catatonic woman Mariah Carey?'
It is, however, refreshing to see a mainstream film dominated by black
actors, in which white actors have small, supporting roles." — Claudia
Puig, USA Today
The Final Word
" 'Lee Daniels' The Butler' is an ambitious, sweeping period drama that
manages to be incredibly affecting and feel as if the words ''For Your
Consideration'' are stamped across every frame." — Chris Nashawaty, Entertainment Weekly