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Something New

 
Movies:

Something New

  • Director: Sanaa Hamri
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy Drama
  • Movie Type: Romantic Comedy, Urban Drama
  • Themes: Opposites Attract, Interracial/Cross-Cultural Romance, Women's Friendship
  • Main Cast: Sanaa Lathan, Simon Baker, Mike Epps, Donald Faison, Blair Underwood
  • Release Year: 2006
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 100 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

A woman discovers that when it comes to love, sometimes opposites really do attract in this romantic comedy-drama. Kenya (Sanaa Lathan) is a successful African-American lawyer in her mid-thirties whose personal life is not going as well as her career. While she's attractive and intelligent, Kenya has rather high standards and isn't willing to settle for a man who isn't everything she wants. While attending a party, Kenya is introduced to Brian (Simon Baker), a landscape architect who handles the gardening at her host's mansion. Brian is immediately and obviously attracted to Kenya, through she doesn't feel the same way at all. However, she likes his work and hires him to refurbish her garden; before long, he asks her out on a date, and against her better judgment she accepts. While Kenya and Brian have little in common, in time they hit it off, and a romance begins to blossom between them. However, Brian happens to be white, which ruffles some feathers among Kenya's friends and family, who try to find her a more suitable, African-American suitor. Also starring Mike Epps, Donald Faison, Blair Underwood, and Alfre Woodard, Something New was the first feature film for director Sanaa Hamri, who previously established herself by directing music videos. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

Wendy Raquel Robinson - Cheryl; Alfre Woodard - Joyce McQueen; DJ Fuzzy Fantabulous - Himself; Katharine Towne - Cahan, Leah; Stanley de Santis - Jack Pino; K.C. Clyde - Waiter; Golden Brooks - Suzzette; Taraji P. Henson - Nedra; Marcus Brown - Rashid Mohammed; Russell Hornsby - Doctor Brockton; Daniel B. Wooten - Starbucks Employee; Lee Garlington - Mrs. Cahan; Tonita Castro - Maria; Matt Malloy - Edwin; David Monahan - Bill Lebree; Gabriel Tigerman - Darren; Tanisha Harper - Stacy; Earl Billings - Edmond McQueen; Michelle Griffin - Kiki; Tanya Wideman-Davis - Rocklin Thompson; Sommore - Sommore; Eric Ekholm - Paul; Henry Simmons - Kyle; Kimberly Barnett - Luna; Deya Marshea Smith - Real Estate Agent; Julie Mond - Penelope; Rose Rollins - Lauren; Rick Fitts - Emcee; Raina Lewis - Young Woman

Credit

Jeanne McCarthy - Casting, Donald Byrd - Choreography, Hope Hanafin - Costume Designer, Noga Isackson - First Assistant Director, Sanaa Hamri - Director, Melissa Kent - Editor, Preston Holmes - Executive Producer, Joe Pichirallo - Executive Producer, Fermin Da Valos II - Location Manager, Andree Juviler - Location Manager, Dwight Williams - Line Producer, Lisa Coleman - Composer (Music Score), Wendy Melvoin - Composer (Music Score), Paul Stewart - Musical Direction/Supervision, Spring Aspers - Musical Direction/Supervision, Charles Papert - Camera Operator, Gary Hatfield - Camera Operator, Mayne Berke - Production Designer, Shane Hurlbut - Cinematographer, Stephanie Allain - Producer, Julius Le Flore - Stunts Coordinator, Dwight Williams - Unit Production Manager, Kriss Turner - Screenwriter, Bradley M. Goodman - Post Production Supervisor, Susan M. Ehrhart - Production Coordinator, Michael C. Blaze - Properties Master, Gregory H. Watkins - Re-Recording Mixer, Cheryl Starbuck - Script Supervisor, Chip Touhey - Second Assistant Director, John Hartigan - Special Effects Coordinator, Charles Papert - Steadicam Operator, David Giammarco - Supervising Sound Editor, Todd R. Higgins - Chief Lighting Technician, John J. Rutchland III - Construction Coordinator, Winnie Brown Willis - Costumes Supervisor, Lillie Frierson - Key Hairstylist, Beverly Jo Pryor - Key Make-up, Chris Kahn - Production Accountant, X1FX - Visual Effects, Casey Hallenbeck - Set Decorator, Susumu Tokunow - Production Sound Mixer, Scarlet Letters - Title Design, Deborah Ross Film Design - Title Design, Kimberly Kimble - Department Head Hair

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Something New

Original poster
Directed by Sanaa Hamri
Produced by Stephanie Allain
Written by Kriss Turner
Starring Sanaa Lathan
Simon Baker
Blair Underwood
Music by Lisa Coleman
Wendy Melvoin
Cinematography Shane Hurlbut
Editing by Melissa Kent
Distributed by Focus Features
Release date(s) January 29, 2006
Country United States
Language English

Something New is a 2006 American romantic drama film directed by Sanaa Hamri. The screenplay by Kriss Turner focuses on interracial relationships and traditional African American family values and social customs.

Contents

Plot

Kenya McQueen (Sanaa Lathan) is a successful, single African American woman who has sacrificed romance in order to pursue a corporate career. Her obsessive compulsive desire for perfection and control has manifested itself in the bland, monochromatic decor of her new home and the rigid rules she follows in her personal life. Urged to loosen up by her friends, Kenya accepts a blind date with landscape architect Brian Kelly (Simon Baker) arranged by her co-worker Leah Cahan (Katharine Towne), who is in the process of planning the kind of wedding Kenya wants herself. The two meet at Starbucks, and she is horrified to discover Brian not only is white, but a manual laborer as well. Unable to see him beyond his race and occupation, she quickly excuses herself and leaves.

The two unexpectedly meet again at a party at Leah's parents' home, where Brian landscaped the grounds. Impressed with his work, Kenya decides to hire him to renovate her unkempt backyard garden. As time passes, their employer-employee relationship evolves into a friendship and then love.

Although Brian is helping her feel more comfortable about her living environment, Kenya finds it difficult to dismiss her reservations about their romance. The opinions of her girlfriends Cheryl (Wendy Raquel Robinson), Nedra (Taraji P. Henson), and Suzette (Golden Brooks), her upper class parents Joyce (Alfre Woodard) and Edmond (Earl Billings), and her womanizing younger brother Nelson (Donald Faison) begin to have a deleterious effect on how she views her relationship, and Brian's unwillingness to discuss prejudice inevitably drives them apart.

Nelson introduces his sister to someone she views as a more acceptable suitor, tax attorney Mark Harper (Blair Underwood), who has just relocated to Los Angeles. The two begin to date, and while Joyce thoroughly approves, Edmond senses his daughter is not as happy as she was with Brian. Everything Kenya thought she wanted suddenly seems immaterial, and nothing Mark does ignites a spark between them. When the dissonance she’s developed finally overwhelms her, Kenya chooses to reunite with Brian, no longer allowing her controlling nature and social norms to dictate matters of the heart.

Cast

  • Sanaa Lathan ..... Kenya Denise McQueen- the beautiful and hard-working, accomplished businesswoman, Kenya is very a organized, straight-forward, no-play-business kind of girl. She overworks herself and is over-achieving; she hasn't had a boyfriend in two years, since her obsession to achieve got in the way. When she meets Brian, she is charmed but cautious, but eventually she allows him to sculpt her into a happier, looser, more relaxed woman as she falls madly in love with him.
  • Simon Baker ..... Brian Kelly- the charming, quirky, and irresistible landscaper that creates a beautiful garden in Kenya's back yard. Brian is a decent, cute, and happy guy, and he quietly adores Kenya at a safe distance until she begins to fall for him, too. Their relationship is pained because of their racial difference, but Brian finds that he can look beyond his differences with Kenya and find something to deeply and madly love.
  • Blair Underwood ..... Mark Harper- the ideal man for Kenya, he is handsome, well-off, and overall a good guy. He develops feelings for Kenya, but she finds that the ideal man she imagined her marrying is not Mark, and she cannot return his feelings.
  • Donald Faison ..... Nelson McQueen- the humorous and womanizing younger brother of Kenya
  • Alfre Woodard ..... Joyce McQueen- Kenya's controlling and perfection-obsessed mother who does care for her children but cares more about their status.
  • Earl Billings ..... Edmond McQueen- the extremely wise and loving father of Kenya, he, unlike his wife, can see that Kenya truly loves Brian, and deeply respects her feelings, even though they are for a white man, and is the one that convinces Kenya to go find Brian again.
  • Wendy Raquel Robinson ..... Cheryl- one of Kenya's good friends
  • Katharine Towne ..... Leah Cahan- the first client of Brian's landscaping business that we meet in the movie
  • Stanley DeSantis ..... Jack Pino- the jerky client of Kenya's who does not respect her, as he cannot look beyond her dark skin
  • Mike Epps ..... Walter, the husband of Cheryl

Critical reception

Manohla Dargis of the New York Times called the film "a pleasantly diverting romance . . . [in which] the chemistry between the leads is as unmistakable as the setup is contrived . . . The lovely Ms. Lathan . . . and the similarly attractive Mr. Baker . . . don't just look good together; they feel right in sync. Their easy, sensual rapport partly owes something to the generally sure hand of the film's director, Sanaa Hamri, making a fine feature debut, and something else, something indefinable, to the delectable mysteries of two bodies in cinematic motion." [1]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times rated the film 3½ out of four stars and commented, "I found myself unexpectedly moved." He continued, "By the end, Something New delivers all the usual pleasures of a love story, and something more. The movie respects its subject and characters, and is more complex about race than we could possibly expect. With this film and the completely different but also observant Queen Latifah comedy Last Holiday, black women are being paid a kind of attention they deserve but rarely get in the movies." [2]

Kevin Crust of the Los Angeles Times called the film "superficial and formulaic but pleasant enough to entertain and qualifies as intelligent and sophisticated by the current standard of Hollywood comedy." He added, "The movie nicely captures the area around Baldwin Hills, is crisply written by Kriss Turner and portrays the upper-middle class black community seldom seen in mainstream TV and film. However, the characterizations, even the leads, rarely rise above archetypes. The film's lack of depth as it oversimplifies the complexities of racism keep it from being anything other than a lightweight date movie." [3]

Ruthe Stein of the San Francisco Chronicle said, "The trouble with the movie is that it sometimes seems at odds with itself, vacillating between a realistic presentation of the obstacles black professional women face finding a suitable mate and another bit of Hollywood fluff where their skin color is glossed over." [4]

Steve Persall of the St. Petersburg Times graded the film B and commented, "I like the way Something New presents facets of African-American life seldom seen in mainstream movies, such as the formality and brief funkiness of a debutante cotillion, the affluent sophistication making such events important. I like Hamri's approach to material that might be offensive from a solidly black or white perspective. It all makes the foundational sameness of the story easier to take. The basic story isn't new, but telling it this way is really something." [5]

Brian Lowry of Variety observed, "Wispy at best, this romantic comedy from a first-time director and screenwriter feels as if whole chunks have been left on the cutting-room floor, with what remains mustering intermittent charm thanks to the attractiveness, if not chemistry, of Sanaa Lathan and Simon Baker . . . Perhaps the best thing the movie has going for it, actually, is that despite the title, there's really nothing new here at all; rather, the beats are so familiar the audience can fill in the gaps themselves." [6]

Award and nominations

  • NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture (Sanaa Lathan, nominee)
  • NAACP Image Award for Best Director of a Feature Film or Television Movie (Sanaa Hamri, nominee)
  • Black Reel Award for Best Screenplay (Kriss Turner, winner)
  • Black Reel Award for Best Film (nominee)
  • Black Reel Award for Best Actress (Sanaa Lathan, nominee)
  • Black Reel Award for Best Director (Sanaa Hamri, nominee)
  • Black Reel Award for Best Original Score (nominee)
  • Black Reel Award for Best Original Soundtrack (nominee)
  • Black Movie Award for Outstanding Achievement in Screenwriting (Kriss Turner, winner)
  • Black Movie Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Lead Role (Sanaa Lathan, nominee)
  • Black Movie Award for Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role (Alfre Woodard, nominee)

DVD release

On May 16, 2006, the film was released on DVD in Region 1 in two versions, one in anamorphic widescreen and the other in fullscreen format. Both have an English audio track and subtitles in English, Spanish, and French. Bonus features include an introduction by Blair Underwood, The Making of Something New, and The Dos and Don'ts of Dating.

References

External links


 
 

 

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Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Something New (film)" Read more