Popularity: 4 (history)
Director: | Lee Daniels |
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Writer: | Suzan-Lori Parks, Johann Hari |
Staring: |
Billie Holiday spent much of her career being adored by fans. In the 1940s, the government targeted Holiday in a growing effort to racialize the war on drugs, ultimately aiming to stop her from singing her controversial ballad, "Strange Fruit." | |
Release Date: | Mar 31, 2021 |
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Director: | Lee Daniels |
Writer: | Suzan-Lori Parks, Johann Hari |
Genres: | Drama, Music, History |
Keywords | war on drugs, new orleans, louisiana, jazz singer or musician, ban from profession, biography, surveillance, heroin addiction, 1940s, 1950s, fbi agent |
Production Companies | Lee Daniels Entertainment, Roth-Kirschenbaum Films |
Box Office |
Revenue: $0
Budget: $0 |
Updates |
Updated: Feb 01, 2025 Entered: Apr 13, 2024 |
Name | Character |
---|---|
Andra Day | Billie Holiday |
Trevante Rhodes | Jimmy Fletcher |
Garrett Hedlund | Harry Anslinger |
Leslie Jordan | Reginald Lord Devine |
Miss Lawrence | Miss Freddy |
Adriane Lenox | Mrs. Fletcher |
Natasha Lyonne | Tallulah Bankhead |
Rob Morgan | Louis McKay |
Da'Vine Joy Randolph | Roslyn |
Evan Ross | Agent Williams |
Tyler James Williams | Lester 'Prez' Young |
Tone Bell | John Levy |
Blake DeLong | Agent Carter |
Dana Gourrier | Sadie |
Melvin Gregg | Joe Guy |
Erik LaRay Harvey | James Monroe |
Ray Shell | Carl The Drummer |
Dusan Dukic | Joe Glaser |
Koumba Ball | Lucille |
Kate MacLellan | Working Class Woman |
Kwasi Songui | Working Class Man |
Letitia Brookes | Velva |
Warren 'Slim' Williams | Bobby Tucker |
Orville Thompson | Auditioning Sax Player |
Jeff Corbett | Congressman JP Thomas |
Damian Joseph Quinn | Roy Cohn |
Robert Alan Beuth | Congressman J. Rankin |
Randy Davison | Senator J. McCarthy |
Kevin Hanchard | Louis Armstrong |
Jono Townsend | Guitar Player |
Morgan Moore | Bass Player |
Arlen John Bonnar | Priest |
Furly Mac | Elevator Attendant |
Andrew Zadel | Agent McDermott |
Tristan D. Lalla | Mr. Jordon Green |
Alex Bisping | Bailiff #1 |
Don Anderson | Judge Ganey |
Amanda Strawn | Gloria |
Charleine Charles | Shirley |
Sylvia Stewart | Stink-Eye Inmate |
Daphné Archer | Jail Dishwasher |
Anita Lee | Fighting Woman |
Tony Chao | Fighting Man |
Linda Sauvé | Receptionist |
Alain Goulem | Ed Fishman |
Ramona Clyke | Miss Mona |
Laurent Beaudin | Ed Fishman's Assistant |
Alika Autran | Martha Anslinger |
Kim Feeney | Lady In Audience |
Diana Carmen Ratycz | Carnegie Fan |
Richard Jutras | Uptown Restaurant Maître d' |
Jonathan Higgins | Defense Lawyer Erlich |
Marc Essertaize | Bailiff #2 |
Nealla Gordon | Courthouse Reporter |
Len Blavatnik | Club Owner |
Christopher Ricardo Price | Drug Dealer |
Taryn Brown | Billie (10 years old) |
Zuri Hawkins | Little Girl in Brothel |
Elizabeth Eveillard | Prostitute 1923 |
Clauter Alexandre | Husband |
Penande Estime | Hanging Woman |
Elikya Tupula | Young Daughter |
Nefertari Zanyah Brewster-Griffith | Older Daughter |
Joe Cobden | George Jessel |
Ronda Louis-Jeune | Jimmy's Girlfriend |
Maxime Paradis | Producer |
Sarah Levesque | Nurse |
Donald Fullilove | Additional Voices (voice) |
Name | Job |
---|---|
Otis Hopson | Stunts |
Lee Daniels | Director |
Suzan-Lori Parks | Screenplay |
Leah Daniels-Butler | Casting |
Shanna Roberts Salée | Third Assistant Director |
Maude Beaunoyer | Assistant Picture Car Coordinator |
John-Sébastien Côté | Armorer |
Heikki Kossi | Foley Artist |
Kris Bowers | Musician, Original Music Composer |
Marie-Claude Lafontaine | Visual Effects Producer |
Simon Beaupré | VFX Artist |
Jay Rabinowitz | Editor |
Ashley Ingram | Casting |
Léa-Valérie Létourneau | Assistant Art Director |
Salaam Remi | Executive Music Producer |
Kevin Scott | Casting |
Patty Long | Unit Production Manager |
H.H. Cooper | First Assistant Director |
Billy Hopkins | Casting |
Carolyne de Bellefeuille | Art Direction |
Paolo Nieddu | Costume Designer |
Lynn Fainchtein | Music Supervisor |
George Parra | Unit Production Manager |
Hubert Brizard | Musician |
Claude Gelineau | Musician |
Jean-Marc Martel | Musician |
Peter Purich | Musician |
Nicolas Cousineau | Musician |
Sébastien Grenier | Musician |
Nathan Mignien | Musician |
Jeremy Sandfelder | Musician |
Vincent Aird | Art Direction |
Simon Théberge | Set Designer |
Cecile Braemer | Art Department Coordinator |
Dany Racine | First Assistant "A" Camera |
Yoann Malnati | "B" Camera Operator, Steadicam Operator |
Isabelle Lauzon | Camera Loader |
Michel Bernier | First Assistant "C" Camera |
Daniel T. Dorrance | Production Design |
Amanda Ghost | Executive Music Producer |
Hélène Ross | Unit Production Manager |
Fanny Hudon | Second Assistant Director |
Michael Scherer | Stunt Coordinator |
Giovany Arteaga | Musician |
Nicola Di Lauro | Musician |
Jean Laplante | Musician |
François D'Anjou Pomerleau | Musician |
Carl Beaudoin | Musician |
Schadrac Émilica | Musician |
Patrice Luneau | Musician |
Jacques Proulx | Musician |
Félix Larivière-Charron | Supervising Art Director |
Guy Pigeon | Set Designer |
Anne-Marie Giroux | Graphic Designer |
Eric Aubin | Second Assistant "B" Camera |
Sylvaine Dufaux | "C" Camera Operator |
Salome Dufaux-Mathieu | Camera Trainee |
Elizabeth Tremblay | Script Supervisor |
Thomas Sedillot | Sound Assistant |
Constant Lavallée | Lighting Technician |
Sébastien Lauzon | Lighting Technician |
Frederic Moreau | Lighting Technician |
Éric Morin | Generator Operator |
Daniel Dinel | Key Grip |
Martin Landry | Grip |
Jean-Phillipe Gauthier | Grip |
Christophe Desjardins | Grip |
Eric Belanger | Grip |
Alexandra Elkin | Grip |
Dominic Prevost | Rigging Grip |
Stephane St-Pierre | Rigging Grip |
Cedric Arcand | Rigging Grip |
Guillaume Vidal | Rigging Grip |
Adam Robidoux | Rigging Grip |
Eva Quintero | Assistant Production Coordinator |
Adrienne Williams | Actor's Assistant |
Harris Ellison | Third Assistant Director |
Brigitte St-Onge | Unit Manager |
Jonathan Meunier | Set Production Assistant |
Christian Rollin | Back-up Truck Production Assistant |
Adam Davis | Producer's Assistant |
Flora Eleftheriou | First Assistant Accountant |
Lynne Dauphinee | Location Scout |
Julie Breton | Extras Casting |
Olivier Proulx | Assistant Property Master |
Vidar Neuhof | On Set Key Props |
Pascale Deschênes | Decorator |
Josée Arsenault | Decorator |
Mario Allard | Musician |
Drey Demo | Musician |
Ken Joseph | Musician |
Daniel Plamondon | Musician |
Olivier Allard | Musician |
Maxime Despax | Musician |
Laszlo Koos | Musician |
Kieran Poile | Musician |
Charles-Antoine Solis | Musician |
Luc-Eric Duhamel | Assistant Art Director |
Isabelle Côté | Graphic Designer |
Nutan Khanna | Clearances Coordinator |
Soupharak Keoborakoth | Second Assistant "A" Camera |
Nicolas Marion | First Assistant "B" Camera |
Christian Caperaa | Camera Loader |
Jean-Francois Tousignant | Second Assistant "C" Camera |
Jean-Francois Landry | Libra Head Technician |
Francis Péloquin | Boom Operator |
Daniel Goyens | Assistant Chief Lighting Technician |
Monica Caballero Moreno | Lighting Technician |
Christopher Cadorette | Lighting Technician |
Alain Apollon | Lighting Technician |
Christine Chu | Lighting Coordinator |
Joost Clerinx | Dolly Grip |
Johanzen Aldana Espinosa | Grip |
Steve Montplaisir | Grip |
Melanie St-Pierre | Grip |
Claude Gervais | Grip |
Daniel Robidoux | Key Rigging Grip |
Emile Gonin Robidoux | Rigging Grip |
Alexandre Dumas | Rigging Grip |
Frederic Calve | Rigging Grip |
Charles Castonguay | Video Assist Operator |
Claude La Haye | Sound Recordist |
Eames Gagnon | Chief Lighting Technician |
Frederic Nivoix | Lighting Technician |
Marc Hénaut | Lighting Technician |
Ryan Faulconbridge | Lighting Technician |
Jeremy Martin | Lighting Coordinator |
Rémi Giroux | Dolly Grip |
Jonathan Barbeau | Grip |
Simon Hébert | Grip |
Christian Chabot | Grip |
Thierry Lacombe | Grip |
Martin Boiteau | Grip |
Michael Robidoux | Rigging Grip |
Carmelo Staguitta | Rigging Grip |
Gabriel Boudrau | Rigging Grip |
Frederic Bilodeau | Rigging Grip |
Philippe Lacrois | Rigging Grip |
Odette Lavigne | Travel Coordinator |
Myriam Santos | Actor's Assistant |
Ben Poppleton | Actor's Assistant |
Benoit Thériault | Assistant Unit Manager |
Valérie Caron | Back-up Set Production Assistant |
Ben Clune | Producer's Assistant |
Ian Malcolm | Producer's Assistant |
François Choinière | Payroll Accountant |
Andrea Kenyon | Local Casting |
Melissa Nepton | Extras Casting Assistant |
Andrew Law | Props |
Vincent Brabant | On Set Props |
Geneviève Boivin | Decorator |
Yves Allard | Assistant Decorator |
Ariane Leroux-Ringuette | Assistant Decorator |
Vincent Morin | Set Dresser |
Alexis St-Denis | Set Dresser |
Alain Clouâtre | Set Dresser |
Elissa Arsenault Soupras | Set Dresser |
Jimmy Brassard | Set Dresser |
Andre Fortin | Special Effects Technician |
Stacey Godding | Special Effects Technician |
Katrina Marie Lukaitis | Costume Coordinator |
Cristina Carvalho | Wardrobe Specialized Technician |
Lynda Goode | Seamstress |
Laurie-Anne St-Pierre Savard | Seamstress |
Catherine Lavoie | Makeup Artist |
Sophie Lebeau | Assistant Makeup Artist |
Chanelle Ouellette | Assistant Makeup Artist |
Caroline Aquin | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
T.A. Henderson | Hairdresser |
Sarah Tremblay | Assistant Hairdresser |
Martin Lapointe | Assistant Hairdresser |
Janie Otis | Assistant Hairdresser |
Manon Joly | Assistant Hairdresser |
Rocco Stallone | Assistant Hairdresser |
Puelo Deir | Unit Publicist |
Thamara Antoine | Set Medic |
Ann Brochu | Construction Manager |
Pablo Figueroa | Head Carpenter |
Jean-François Dubé | Rigging Grip |
Kathy Ann Thomas | Production Coordinator |
Patricia Ferris | Production Secretary |
Andre Thomas | Actor's Assistant |
Thom Jones | Dialect Coach |
Ami Diakité | Assistant Director Trainee |
Stephane Desharnais | Assistant Unit Manager |
Martin Roy | Truck Production Assistant |
Danny Williams | Producer's Assistant |
Tom Di Blasio | Production Accountant |
Benoît Mathieu | Location Manager |
Randi Wells | Local Casting |
Simone Leclerc | Property Master |
Eulalie Gagne | Props |
Sarah-Rose Buchanan | On Set Props |
Jacques Rajotte | Decorator |
Marzia Pellissier | Assistant Decorator |
Michèle Laroche | Leadman |
Eduardo Santibanez | Set Dresser |
Martin Leblanc | Set Dresser |
Frédérick Marcil | Set Dresser |
Julyan Chamorro | Set Dresser |
Stephan McKenzie | On Set Dresser |
Etienne Trepanier | Special Effects Technician |
Nedra Gribaa | Assistant Costume Designer |
Gigi Duval | Key Dresser |
Deborah Adams | Seamstress |
Sylvie Théberge | Seamstress |
Sigesmund Moser | Tailor |
Camiel McLean | Assistant Makeup Artist |
Sandra Ruel | Assistant Makeup Artist |
Sherry Hu | Assistant Makeup Artist |
Vague Vartanian | Special Effects Makeup Artist |
Liliane Saad | Hairdresser |
Nathalie Garon | Assistant Hairdresser |
Marie-Eve Menard | Assistant Hairdresser |
Nathalie Dion | Assistant Hairdresser |
Francoise Lortie | Assistant Hairdresser |
Charles Gregory Ross | Wig Designer, In Memory Of, Hair Department Head |
Takashi Seida | Still Photographer |
Josée Juteau | Animal Wrangler |
Rémi Beaudoin | Head Carpenter |
Marc-André Proulx | Head Carpenter |
Myriam Tallard | Greensman |
Éric Brais | Picture Car Coordinator |
Yan Philie | Assistant Picture Car Coordinator |
Philippe Gilbert | Transportation Captain |
Joseph Petrucelli | Music Consultant |
Luc Champagne | Catering Head Chef |
Natalie Turgeon | Assistant Chef |
Mallory Trice | Post Production Coordinator |
Kyle Falcon | First Assistant Editor |
Daniel Tantalean | Post Production Assistant |
Kelsey Schuyler | Post Production Accountant |
Robert Hein | Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Supervising Sound Editor |
Josh Berger | Dialogue Editor, Sound Re-Recording Mixer |
Dennis Dembeck | Assistant Sound Editor |
Lars Halvorsen | Foley Editor |
Léonie Lavoie | Assistant Decorator |
Colin Lavigne | Set Dresser |
Julie Baumann | Set Dresser |
Joakim Rivest-Girard | Set Dresser |
Jason Sheppard | Set Dresser |
Julien Bocciarelli | Set Dresser |
Guillaume Murray | Special Effects Supervisor |
Marc Godding | Special Effects Technician |
Pat Welch | Costume Supervisor |
Susana Vera | Tailor |
Priscillia Collin | Seamstress |
Viriya Say | Seamstress |
Laini Thompson | Makeup Department Head |
Lizane La Salle | Assistant Makeup Artist |
Genevieve Bonneau | Assistant Makeup Artist |
Kathy Tse | Special Effects Key Makeup Artist |
Gladys Simard | Assistant Hairdresser |
Mario Saint-Louis | Assistant Hairdresser |
Pascale Royer | Assistant Hairdresser |
Jerry Asiedu Pipim | Assistant Hairdresser |
André Duval | Assistant Hairdresser |
Bob Kretschmer | Wigmaker |
Mirsad Osmanbasic | Set Medic |
Rejean Brochu | Construction Coordinator |
Richard Cardin | Head Carpenter |
Jean-Philippe Silvestro | Head Carpenter |
Olya Zarapina | Greensman |
Claude Saingelain | Assistant Picture Car Coordinator |
Michel Robert | Base Camp Operator |
Steve Jordan | Music Consultant |
Sébastien Paré | Chef |
Alexis Wiscomb | Post Production Supervisor |
Ejon Williamson | Post Production Assistant |
Dan Schrecker | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Glenfield Payne | Sound Re-Recording Mixer, Sound Effects Editor |
Dave Paterson | Dialogue Editor |
Kenton Jakub | ADR Editor |
Bobby Johanson | ADR Mixer |
Georgia Simon | ADR Voice Casting |
Max Wrightson | Music Coordinator |
Edward Trybek | Orchestrator |
Fabrizio Mancinelli | Conductor |
Tim Stipan | Colorist |
Loic Laurelut | Compositing Supervisor |
Mélissa Massé | Visual Effects Coordinator |
Sébastien Chartier | VFX Artist |
Andris Pakalns | VFX Artist |
Camille Dao | VFX Artist |
Charles Richer | VFX Artist |
Marc A. Rousseau | Executive Visual Effects Producer |
Pietu Korhonen | Foley Editor |
Reno Hebert | Greensman |
Marc-Antoine Paquet | Sculptor |
Jocelyne Hamel | Assistant Picture Car Coordinator |
Péo Chénard | Transportation Coordinator |
Rhiannon Colley | Craft Service |
Juan Pablo | Assistant Chef |
Michelle Fowler | Additional Post-Production Supervisor |
Joe Leonard | Additional Editing |
Samantha Hernandez | Post Production Assistant |
Daniel Triller | Visual Effects Editor |
Sylvia Menno | Dialogue Editor |
Ruth Hernandez | ADR Editor |
Kari Vähäkuopus | Foley Mixer |
Michael Rivera | ADR Recordist |
Jen Monnar | Supervising Music Editor |
Stephen Kaye | Scoring Mixer |
Jonathan Beard | Orchestrator |
Moises Cruz | Digital Intermediate Producer |
Nick Nassif | Color Assistant |
Eric Clement | CG Supervisor |
Philippe Langlois | Matte Painter |
Valérie Dugas | VFX Artist |
Raphael Valle | VFX Artist |
Jessica Francoeur-Ducharme | VFX Artist |
Pierre-David Myles | VFX Artist |
Olivier Péloquin | Pipeline Technical Director |
Simon Paquin | Transportation Captain |
Trevor Jones | Stunts |
Joel Scheuneman | Sound Engineer |
Scott Michael Smith | Score Engineer |
Henri Wilkinson | Orchestrator |
Rebecca Erbe | Digital Intermediate Producer |
Alain Lachance | Visual Effects Supervisor |
Bryan Hsu | VFX Artist |
Didier Bertrand | VFX Artist |
Maxime Lapointe | VFX Artist |
Jonathan Lancelot | Visual Effects Editor |
Kristyn Hume | Title Designer |
Eboni Nichols | Choreographer |
Andrew Dunn | Director of Photography, "A" Camera Operator |
Johann Hari | Book |
Rodney Alexandre | Stunts, Stunt Coordinator |
Tyler Hall | Stunt Coordinator |
Chelsea Jackson | Stunts |
Jason Conyers | Stunts |
Stéphanie-Alexandra Joseph | Receptionist |
Hughes Winborne | Additional Editing |
Ian Cymore | Dialogue Editor |
Name | Title |
---|---|
Jeff Kirschenbaum | Producer |
Mark Bomback | Executive Producer |
Tucker Tooley | Producer |
Jeremy Allen | Executive Producer |
Cassian Elwes | Executive Producer |
Hilary Shor | Executive Producer |
Dennis Stratton | Executive Producer |
Jahil Fisher | Co-Producer |
Jordan Fudge | Producer |
Marie Cisco | Co-Producer |
Wellington Love | Co-Producer |
Pamela Oas Williams | Producer |
Simone Sheffield | Co-Executive Producer |
Jeremy Green | Associate Producer |
Patty Long | Executive Producer |
H.H. Cooper | Co-Producer |
Thomas Westfall | Associate Producer |
Jake Meyers | Associate Producer |
Joe Roth | Producer |
Lee Daniels | Producer |
Johann Hari | Executive Producer |
Organization | Category | Person | |
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Academy Awards | Best Supporting Actor | N/A | Nominated |
Golden Globes | Best Supporting Actor | André Holland | Nominated |
Golden Globes | Best Supporting Actress | Alexandra Day | Won |
SAG Awards | Best Supporting Actress | Alexandra Day | Nominated |
Popularity History
Year | Month | Avg | Max | Min |
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2024 | 4 | 19 | 29 | 15 |
2024 | 5 | 20 | 29 | 13 |
2024 | 6 | 17 | 28 | 11 |
2024 | 7 | 25 | 47 | 13 |
2024 | 8 | 15 | 20 | 10 |
2024 | 9 | 12 | 19 | 8 |
2024 | 10 | 15 | 24 | 8 |
2024 | 11 | 13 | 23 | 8 |
2024 | 12 | 13 | 25 | 9 |
2025 | 1 | 14 | 24 | 9 |
2025 | 2 | 11 | 17 | 3 |
2025 | 3 | 5 | 14 | 1 |
2025 | 4 | 2 | 7 | 1 |
2025 | 5 | 2 | 7 | 1 |
2025 | 6 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
2025 | 7 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
2025 | 8 | 1 | 2 | 0 |
2025 | 9 | 4 | 5 | 2 |
2025 | 10 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
Trending Position
If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com Even though I love listening to jazz, I've never been to a concert or a club specific to this type of music. Following this train of thought, I didn't know anything about Billie Holiday's real-life s ... tory and her tremendous impact not only in the respective musical genre but also in the fight against the government concerning the evil, shameful act of lynching - which shockingly still occurs today in some countries. Strange Fruit, a poem written by Abel Meeropol, became incredibly controversial due to its brutal lyrics describing the said act, comparing the victim to the fruit of trees. The adapted song has been referenced as the beginning of the civil rights movement, and Andra Day's performance is the standout of a quite disappointing film. I just watched The Mauritanian - a movie "based on true events" - earlier this week, and I wrote in its review that I'm almost always captivated by the main story in this type of film, even if the rest doesn't quite hold up. The United States vs. Billie Holiday is a biographical movie inspired by the singer's life, but besides Day's powerful display and memorable music, I struggle to find any other positively relevant aspects. Daniel T. Dorrance's fabulous production design is hard to ignore, as is Kris Bowers' attention-grabbing score. However, these two rarely compensate for the jumbled editing (Jay Rabinowitz), untidy screenplay (Suzan-Lori Parks), and even Lee Daniels' erratic direction. From the awkward, swift transitions to black-and-white and back to color to the lack of connection between cuts and even storylines, it's incredibly hard to feel captivated by such a visually confusing film. Suzan-Lori Parks' script enters a monotonous, repetitive cycle of depicting Billie Holiday heavily smoking and taking drugs, followed by singing a full song and having sex with a random man, all while trying countless times to stop her bad habits. On one hand, Billie Holiday is a strong, proud Black woman who's trying to fight for what's right through her beautiful singing voice and astonishing tenacity. On the other hand, the viewers have to endure numerous sequences of despicable behavior from someone who doesn't look like a good influence at all. I understand that a protagonist doesn't have to be perfect, much on the contrary. Nevertheless, the narrative structure is so incoherent and raises so many moral questions regarding the true essence of the main character that I couldn't help but feel disengaged from her story. The only interesting moments are the musical performances which might be the only storytelling detail that works as a connecting point to what comes next or as a reference to what happened just before. Every other scene is seemingly detached from the next one, and Lee Daniels struggles to find the right path. The only storytelling component well-developed from beginning to end is the successful build-up to the performance of Strange Fruit. In the end, Andra Day is the savior of what could have been a massive disaster. Her interpretation is one of the most impressive debut performances I've seen in the last few years. Ignoring her indisputably fantastic singing voice, Day shows a remarkable emotional range and a physical commitment to the role that not many actresses are capable of. She outshines every single element in the movie, including the remaining cast. Day is the only reason why I kept getting "dragged" to the screen. Sadly, one person isn't enough to overcome dozens of significant issues. The United States vs. Billie Holiday could have been an inspirational, impactful story about Billie Holiday's influence not only in jazz music but mainly in the fight for equal civil rights. Instead, Lee Daniels' inconsistent direction and Suzan-Lori Parks' extremely messy screenplay are just two of many issues that transform this film into an absolute letdown. From the awful editing that detaches almost every storyline from each other to the questionable storytelling decisions regarding the repetitive, tiresome narrative structure, it becomes surprisingly difficult to fully support the protagonist's behavior. Neat production design and engaging score, but it's Andra Day's phenomenal debut performance that saves a potential trainwreck. Her music and acting display are the two key elements that keep the movie above water. I can't properly recommend it unless there's a personal interest in the main character's life. Rating: D+
Jazz musician Billie Holiday is a legend; one of the greatest musicians of all time. Most music fans can name their favorite Holiday tune, but none caused more controversy than her song about black lynching, “Strange Fruit.” Screenwriter Suzan-Lori Parks builds her story (based on the novel by Johan ... n Hari) around the song, one that many people claimed had un-American lyrics and provoked people “in the wrong way.” “The United States vs. Billie Holiday” is a film about racial injustice and censorship surrounding a stirring work of art that gave power to the woman who sang it, as well as the people who heard it. It was a song that ultimately led to events that ruined Holiday’s life. If you are unfamiliar with “Strange Fruit,” it would be beneficial to give it a listen before watching this film. Most of the story is based on the song, which provides a means for director Lee Daniels to start with a focused, small story and build on his larger narrative. You can’t escape the fact that this is yet another tragic artist movie where a once-in-a-lifetime talent destroys her life with drugs, booze, and poor choices. But what makes this more interesting is that Holiday (Andra Day) actually became an enemy of the United States government because of that one haunting song. Led by Harry Anslinger (Garrett Hedlund), the Federal Bureau of Narcotics painted a big target on the jazz musician’s back, using her illegal drug addiction as an excuse to barge through the door to complete their real mission: censorship of an African-American artist. This is an interesting and important story of black America that needs to be unwrapped from our country’s history. It’s fantastic that more stories like this are being told, especially true events that have been long buried in popular culture. Daniels is the perfect choice to handle this biopic, and he adds some nice directorial choices and touches that stay true to his creative vision for the material. Daniels doesn’t shy away from the less idealized parts of Holiday’s life, including the heroin use and alcohol abuse that tragically ended her life at 44, and her rocky relationship with Federal Agent Jimmy Fletcher (Trevante Rhodes), the man who targeted her with an undercover sting operation. The scenes of drug use and the aftermath of a quick high become so repetitive in the film’s last half, which is a shame because all this rambling amplifies the movie’s imperfections. It’s too long, too. Jazz fans will love that the film features plenty of Holiday’s classic music, and the period set designs and costumes are astonishing on every level. Day fully steps into the shoes of a tortured artist, and she mimics Holiday’s mannerisms and stage presence very well. “The United States vs. Billie Holiday” is not an inspirational biopic, but it’s an intimate portrait of brilliant and gifted jazz singer who was tragically brought down by fame, addiction, the ghosts of her past, and the U.S. government.
In a scene from The United States vs. Billie Holiday, Billie (Andra Day) is about to sing “Strange Fruit” in concert, which Harry J. Anslinger (Garrett Hedlund), the first commissioner of the US Treasury Department's Federal Bureau of Narcotics, had forbidden her to do. Behind the audience is a row ... of uniformed policemen. Billie goes straight for the first verse (even though “Strange Fruit” actually features a long instrumental intro). The cops start moving toward the stage, from which Billie is promptly spirited away by her own camp. This happens after one of Anslinger’s underlings has made it a point that "we can't arrest a negro for singing a song." One can only wonder, then, what those policemen planned to do once they had Billie within reach (I can think of a couple of things, but nothing feasible in front of witnesses). But I digress. “Strange Fruit,” a song protesting the lynching of African Americans, was popularized by Holiday, but originally written by American composer and poet Abel Meeropol – a teensy-weensy detail that the movie conveniently leaves out, perhaps because giving a white man born to Russian Jewish immigrants credit would not jibe with the film’s message. But, what is its message? That Billie Holiday was a social activist because she sang exactly one (1) song that she didn't even write? That she was an icon of equality, even though she treated her dogs better than the members of her band? That she is a role model for the African-American community, despite her liberal use of the N word? That her drug abuse was okay because men abused her all her life? That she spent a lot of time behind bars, but always as a victim of circumstance? Or that she was talented but not particularly bright? In fact, Billie is so dumb in this film that she continues to use drugs in front of the federal agent, named Jimmy Fletcher (Trevante Rhodes), who has already arrested her twice, and whom she not only treats as a member of her entourage, but also has an affair with. I don’t doubt that the makers of TUSvs.BH had good intentions, but the execution leaves a lot to be desired. The film begins and ends with brief mentions of the state of the legislature on lynching, but in between it has as little to say about it as Billie herself. It’s odd that they couldn’t find an opportunity to express some sort of opinion on the subject in a 130-minute film, but then too much valuable time is wasted on plot points that range from the unnecessary to the inexplicable. For example, the romance between Billie and Jimmy is not only a complete fabrication, but is also the cause of a sequence in which Jimmy, who gleefully partakes in Billie’s substance use, has a drug-induced vision of her childhood. Why would he have such an experience, and why would anyone care about it? This is the kind of thing that makes me think drugs were as readily available to the filmmakers as to the characters.