Oprah Winfrey Presents: Their Eyes Were Watching God with Halle Berry: DVD Cover

    Oprah Winfrey Presents: Their Eyes Were Watching God
    a.k.a. Their Eyes Were Watching God Director: Darnell Martin Cast: Halle Berry, Michael Ealy, Ruby Dee, Terrence Howard

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    • DVD Release Date: 11/29/2005
    • Rating: Rated TV14
    • Sales Rank: 4,042

    Viewer Rating: (5 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Inspiration" See All

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
    • Scenes
    • Customer Reviews
    • Cast & Crew
    • Full Product Details

    Features

    Closed Caption

    Full Product Details

    Scene Index

    Disc #1 -- Their Eyes Were Watching God
    1. Introduction / Opening
    2. An Arranged Marriage
    3. Change and Chains
    4. Mayor Joe Starks
    5. Tea Cake
    6. Steppin' Out
    7. On The Road
    8. Lake Okeechobee
    9. Hurricane!
    10. Tea Cake's Sickness
    11. "Bless His Heart"
    12. "I'm Watching God" / Ending

    Scene Index

    Editorial Reviews

    Originally telecast March 6, 2005, by ABC, this "Oprah Book Club" TV movie is adapted from Zora Neale Hurston's novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, a certified classic of African-American literature. Covering the first 30 years of the 20th century, the film is set in Eatonville, FL, a largely black community and the home of free-spirited Janie Crawford (Halle Berry). Forced into marriage with a much older and much wealthier man at age 16, Janie endures both this unhappy union and a second equally dismal marriage, trapped not only by the bonds of matrimony but also by the rigid patriarchal society of the period. Her only happiness is manifested in her ongoing illicit romance with a younger, none too reliable gent known as Tea Cake (Michael Ealy) -- much to the shock and dismay of her very proper neighbors. Devotees of the original novel expressed displeasure over the film's sketchy portrayal of the protagonist, a multidimensional character reduced to an impulsive hedonist for the purposes of the screenplay (though Halle Berry's towering performance more than compensates for the weaknesses of the scripts). More than that, the fans of the Hurston original bemoaned the loss of the novel's pronounced racial content, which harshly criticized the caste system within the Southern black community of the early 20th century, whereby a light-skinned woman was regarded as "superior," and thus more desirable, than her darker-skinned sisters. No one, however, could find fault with performance of the great Ruby Dee as Nanny, nor the film's lush production trappings. Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

    Customer Reviews

    Food for the Soulby Ubepolite

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    June 07, 2009: I have read the book twice, and although key elements are missing from the movie; I love the movie. I think the character Janie comes across clearly enough to make a person want to read the book. In no way does the movie take the place of the book, but that never happens anyway. I do, however, wish the character Tea Cake would have been depicted a little better. Overall I think Oprah tried her best, considering the fact that she couldn't make a four hour long movie. By all means watch the movie, then go read the book and I ensure you that your soul will be fed.

    So, none of you actually read the book . . .by Anonymous

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    April 14, 2006: Unfortunately, Oprah's touch is not golden when it comes to this movie. She chooses to ignore crucial themes present in the impressive novel in favor or presenting a "kiss to change all kissing" which really just trivializes all that Hurston was trying to accomplish as a novelist. Amazingly, Oprah succeeds in removing all of the racial and gender commentary present in the novel. And, about that kiss, did you all forget that Tea Cake beat Janie? Does that lackluster kiss erase abuse?


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