1989 was a busy year for Denzel Washington; it was the year Glory
was released, a film in which his performance would earn a second
nomination for a Best Supporting Actor Oscar. The first nomination came
two years before, from the film Cry Freedom, for his stirring
performance as Sergeant Biko. Washington would win the Best Supporting
Oscar for Glory, propelling him to stardom and joining a very
elite group of African-American actors to win Academy Awards - Sidney
Poitier earned his Best Actor award in 1963 for Lilies of the
Field, and Louis Gossett, Jr. earned his Best Supporting Actor
statuette for An Officer and a Gentleman in 1982. So in all the
excitement, it's quite understandable that another film Washington
completed in 1989 was largely overlooked - The Mighty Quinn, a
Caribbean murder mystery that was quite a change of pace from the bloody
battlefields of the American Civil War.
Washington plays
Xavier Quinn, the chief of police in a Jamaica-esque town (although
filmed there, the locale is never specified). When a well-known white
businessman is found gruesomely murdered, Cross finds himself in the
middle of strong political forces pitting the haves against the
have-nots, with strong undercurrents of the black and white tensions
that are deeply embedded in the town's history. The prime suspect is
quickly determined to be the town's favorite local career criminal,
Maubee, who also happens to be Quinn's childhood friend. The race is
on to solve the mystery, amidst exotic scenery and driving reggae
music.
Based on the novel Finding Maubee, by A. H.
Z. Carr, the film's screenplay was written by Hampton Fancher, who also
authored Blade Runner (1982). The film sports an impressive
supporting cast, with Robert Townsend as Maubee leading the way.
Townsend has established himself as a pioneering force in
African-American film with risky and daring projects such as
Hollywood Shuffle (1987) and The Five Heartbeats (1991).
James Fox, who seems to specialize in snooty and despicable British
aristocrats, plays Elgin, the main source of conflict for Quinn; Fox is
best known for his performances in Those Magnificent Men in Their
Flying Machines (1965) and A Passage to India (1984).
Other standouts in the cast include M. Emmet Walsh as a
mysterious new visitor to the island; with roles in films ranging from
Serpico (1973) to The Jerk in (1979), Walsh has
established himself as one of the most prolific and popular character
actors in American films. Movie critic Roger Ebert immortalized him
with his "Stanton-Walsh rule", stating that any film with Walsh or Harry
Dean Stanton couldn't be all that bad! Mimi Rogers, probably better
known for her marriage to Tom Cruise than for her film roles, plays the
seductive wife of Elgin. Heated scenes between Washington and Rogers
created lots of sexual tension in the original cut but, unfortunately, a
kissing scene between the two was deleted out of the film after testing
audiences objected to the interracial coupling. Two television veterans
round out the cast; Esther Rolle as the island's witch figure, and
Sheryl Lee Ralph as Quinn's aspiring singer-wife. Rolle is best known
for her work on Good Times (1976), and Ralph appeared for many
years in Moesha (1996).
The Mighty
Quinn received mixed reviews, but most had favorable feedback for
Washington; The New York Times declared he "gives the smooth,
funny, laid-back performance that could help make him the first black
matinee idol since Sidney Poitier." Indeed, a highlight of the film is
watching Washington tickle the ivories while singing "Cakewalk into
Town." Music plays a major role in the film--a reggae-induced version
of Bob Dylan's The Mighty Quinn pops up a couple of times, due in no
small part to the influence of members of the late Bob Marley's family.
His widow Rita, as well as daughters Cedella and Sharon all have bit
parts, and Rita is listed in the credits as the Reggae Music
Consultant.
Producer: Dale Pollock, Ed Elbert
Director: Carl Schenkel
Screenplay: Hampton
Fancher, based on a novel by A. H. Z. Carr
Art Direction: Gregory Keen
=0DCinematography: Jacques
Steyn
Editing: John Jympson
Music: Anne Dudley
Cast: Denzel Washington (Xavier Quinn), Robert Townsend (Maubee), James Fox
(Elgin), Mimi Rogers (Hadley Elgin), M. Emmet Walsh
(Miller).
C-94m. Letterboxed.
by Eleanor Quin
The Mighty Quinn
by Eleanor Quin | January 16, 2003

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