A Jazzman’s Blues review – soulful Netflix drama is Tyler Perry’s magnum opus (2024)

Tyler Perry did not become a billionaire media mogul by making fine art. He did it by mass-producing plays, films and TV series about scorned Black women and their dysfunctional families who ultimately find succor in Christian lessons in forgiveness, dignity and self-worth. And as mesmerizing as it’s been to watch this New Orleans-born, former temp worker who never finished high school write, produce, direct and act in much of this work – not least as the tart-tongued, pistol wielding granny Madea – the work ethic didn’t exactly endear him to highbrow consumers who expected more of a 53-year-old Black man who rightly crows about opening one of the industry’s largest studio lots on a former Confederate army base that’s played host to everything from Marvel epics to Bad Boys for Life to Coming to America 2.

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Spike Lee would set the critical tone against Perry a decade ago, blasting his work as “coonery” and “buffoonery”. But when Perry, who got the last laugh by naming a sound stage after the She’s Gotta Have It director, took risks, the audiences for films like For Colored Girls weren’t nearly as robust as they were for the Madea franchise. “I would love to go do a movie that’s as powerful as Schindler’s List,” he told an audience at a Goldman Sachs conference four years ago. “I wrote a script in 1995 about a Holocaust survivor and a jazz singer. But I knew what I was building I had to focus on … so that I could build all these other things to stand on.”

Here at last is that feature, A Jazzman’s Blues, which couldn’t be more unrecognizable as a Tyler Perry production. Gone are the overbearing religious themes, the risible wigs and the familiar rotation of company players burning through tens of pages of a day in single takes. (Brad Benedict, a supporting actor in the BET White House drama The Oval, was one notable exception.) Rather, this is a story that takes its time building characters and conflict over the course of two-plus hours before winding down with a wallop. If there’s anything to lament, it’s Perry’s decision to drop the film on Netflix instead of challenging the current box office’s weak crop. Jazzman isn’t just good for a Tyler Perry movie. It’s good full stop.

Set in rural Georgia in 1940, Jazzman starts as a teen romance between family black sheep Bayou (Joshua Boone) and Leanne (Solea Pfeiffer), who is sent away to live up north after Bayou proposes marriage. Even though he goes on with his life (enlists in the service, dodges combat and returns home after suffering an injury), he still carries a flame for Leanne. And when she returns on the arm of a white scion of a political dynasty, it sends shivers through the Black community who knew her back when. Bayou knows she’s “playing a dangerous game”, but neither can resist the urge to reconnect. When Leanne’s diabolical mother, who sent her away to begin with, catches wind of the kids’ rekindled romance, she tells a lie that forces Bayou to skip town with his older brother for Chicago.

That brother, Wille Earl (Austin Scott), was off to make his fortune as a trumpet player and had an audition (kind of) set up in the hottest room in town by his mysterious manager Ira (Ryan Eggold), a Holocaust survivor with acute survivor’s guilt. But as Bayou, a shy singer with a big voice, emerges as the much bigger talent, Wille Earl’s resentment deepens with his addiction to heroin. Like Leanne, Bayou is eventually lured back home to check in on his mother, whose thriving juke joint business grew fallow after he escaped town. The star-crossed lovers hitch another plan to ditch town again, this time with a baby in their party.

Everything about this film is genuinely absorbing. The performances are restrained. The locations, many of them seemingly on the Perry Studios lot, are lush. The musical numbers are decadent, no doubt thanks to Perry roping in the multi-Grammy winning jazz composer Terence Blanchard, a longtime Spike Lee collaborator. The storytelling is efficient, the scenes well-paced, the command of social and racial politics ironclad. Perry never shows up on screen, in drag or otherwise. But his vast talent and resources shine through. And so does his heart.

So Perry took 30 years to build an empire. In the end, there’s no doubt it was the right move. If he had tried starting his career with Jazzman, the world probably never sees the film at all, let alone in this stunning, unadulterated form. Perry not only fulfilled his promise – you could call this his magnum opus. But (and I can’t believe I’m writing this) his best might indeed be yet to come.

  • A Jazzman’s Blues is now available on Netflix

A Jazzman’s Blues review – soulful Netflix drama is Tyler Perry’s magnum opus (2024)

FAQs

A Jazzman’s Blues review – soulful Netflix drama is Tyler Perry’s magnum opus? ›

Everything about this film is genuinely absorbing. The performances are restrained. The locations, many of them seemingly on the Perry Studios lot, are lush. The musical numbers are decadent, no doubt thanks to Perry roping in the multi-Grammy winning jazz composer Terence Blanchard, a longtime Spike Lee collaborator.

Is Jazzman's Blues worth watching? ›

Surprisingly good movie from Tyler Perry. I have never found Tyler Perry's movies to be very entertaining so I went into this not expecting much. Safe to say it exceeded my expectations.

What is the Jazzman's Blues movie about? ›

Who is the old lady at the beginning of a jazzman's blues? ›

A Jazzman's Blues (2022) - Daphne Reid as Elderly Hattie Mae - IMDb.

Is Tyler Perry Jazzman Blues based on a true story? ›

But for me, I wanted to tell the story now, even though it's fictional, but it touches on some very important things that have happened in our society. And I want to open that conversation, especially at the end of the movie, something happens.

Why is a jazzman's blues rated R? ›

Rated R for scenes of substance abuse, violence, rape, brief lovemaking and cruel language. Running time: 2 hours 7 minutes. Watch on Netflix.

What happened at the end of Jazzman's blues? ›

Bayou is reunited with Leanne, but due to Willie Earl's tip off, a mob lynches Bayou to the distress of Leanne and Bayou's family. Jonathan, who is Leanne's son, is stunned after reading the letters and concludes that he is really Bayou's son and Hattie Mae's grandson.

Who was Bayous' father in a Jazzman's blues? ›

Bayou's home life is troubled, too. His father, Buster (E. Roger Mitchell), a musician with excessive faith in his own gifts, despises him, preferring his older son, Willie Earl (Austin Scott), who has dutifully learned to play trumpet to please Buster.

Is Leanne Black in a Jazzman's blues? ›

Leanne came back to town eventually—married to a white man and passing as a white woman, though she herself is Black. The segregated town would likely destroy her if they discovered she had “tricked” them. But despite her marriage, she cannot deny that she still loves Bayou, and Bayou still loves her.

What was the last Tyler Perry movie? ›

A Madea Homecoming is a 2022 American comedy film produced, written, and directed by Tyler Perry and his second film to be released by Netflix.

Was Leanne's baby Bayous? ›

Despite his success, Bayou is unable to forget his love for Leanne and upon hearing that she's given birth to a baby, he realizes that the baby is his and plans a one-night return to rescue her.

Where was the movie A Jazzman's blues filmed? ›

Perry always shoots his own films in Georgia so he moved “A Jazzman's Blues” fictionally from his home state of Louisiana to the Savannah area, where most of the exteriors of the movie were shot last year.

Who plays Mama in A Jazzman's blues? ›

Amirah Vann knows she gives off serious mama energy on screen and she's made peace with it. Long before she welcomed a child of her own in the world, the now 42-year-old actress was cast as the ferocious and flawed Ms.

Who is the brother in the jazzman blues? ›

In reality, Willie Earl (Austin Scott) is actually about 5 years younger than Bayou, (Joshua Boone) who plays his younger brother, despite playing the older brother.

Who sings on Jazzman Blues? ›

The soundtrack features vocals by the cast members, including Joshua Boone, Amirah Vann and Austin Scott. A Jazzman's Blues is housed in a gatefold sleeve and includes an unfolded “paper plane” insert with lyrics of Ruth B.'s song “Paper Airplane”.

Who played Bucket in Jazzman's Blues? ›

After disgracing himself with a terrible turn on the trumpet, Bayou meets Leanne (Solea Pfeiffer), a pretty girl nicknamed Bucket in honor of the casual way her mother dumped her in the custody of her vicious grandfather.

Why is the Blues Brothers such a good movie? ›

It's a fairly simple plot, told in a straightforward manner by Landis, who creates a visually stimulating and aurally satisfying movie that follows the adventures of the Brothers Blues as they travel around the good state of Illinois, seeking out the members of their former band and formulating their plan to save the ...

What is a jazzman's blues rated? ›

Is More Than Blue the series worth watching? ›

This series showed all the intricacies that happen with terminal illnesses, how brutal it is one the sufferer and their loved one. I'm grateful for the creators and the actors for their beautifully well-done piece of work. The environment felt so gentle despite the hard hitting topic.

Is it worth watching out of the blue? ›

Out of the Blue taps into the classical era of film noir...it's likely to be a delight for the movie buffs among us. A great femme fatale can elevate any noir, but the talented Kruger isn't given much to work with here.

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