15 NOW PLAYING WHAT’S IN THE THEATERS AROUND EASTERN OREGON SEPTEMBER 15�22, 2021 ‘Respect’ is an enjoyable ode to Aretha Franklin, biopic cliches and all By Justin Chang Los Angeles Times T here are moments when “Re- spect,” an uneven, prosaic but aff ecting new movie star- ring Jennifer Hudson as a young Aretha Franklin, comes close to pinpointing something true and revealing about its subject’s art. That may sound like faint praise, but it’s closer than many musician biopics get. Watch enough and their cliches start to sound like greatest hits: the troubled childhood marked by fl ashes of genius; the record deals and album cover mon- tages; the marriages torn asunder by addiction, abuse and the ravages of fame. The music becomes a soundtrack at best and an afterthought at worst, something to paper over the gaps between traumas and milestones. “Respect,” glossily produced, skillfully performed and notably Quantrell D. Colbert/MGM Jennifer Hudson (left) stars as Aretha Franklin, with Mary J. Blige as Dinah Washington in “Respect.” developed by Franklin herself before her death in 2018, doesn’t entirely avoid these traps. But as directed by Liesl Tommy (“Queen Sugar,” “The Walking Dead”), making a solid feature debut, it rarely stumbles right into them. The script, by playwright and TV writer Tracey Scott Wilson, may be a thinner, more fl attering ac- count than this year’s unauthor- ized miniseries “Genius: Aretha,” but it also makes a virtue of some of its conventions, investing well- worn notes with fresh reserves of emotion. That’s fi tting, insofar as part of Franklin’s brilliance lay in her ability to riff on well-loved standards; her 1972 gospel album, “Amazing Grace,” the pro- duction of which draws the story to a close, is a transcendent example. The song that gives the movie its title is another. Stop by the Chamber office for your free gift Take a picture of you and your family at the Conestoga Wagon at the viewpoint above Prairie City and tag us on Instagram @grant_county_oregon_chamber! “That’s Otis Redding’s song,” someone protests in the early stages of Aretha’s soon-to-be- defi nitive reworking. (“Otis who?” comes the eventual rejoinder.) The unveiling of that 1967 all- timer provides a rousing mid- movie payoff that Hudson, whom Franklin personally selected for the role, tears into with unsurpris- ing aplomb. But in some ways, the songwriting scene that precedes it is even more enjoyable: Aretha is up late with her sisters, Carolyn (Hailey Kilgore) and Erma (Saycon Sengbloh), teasing out the beats and fl ourishes that will make this version so memorable, including the infectious chorus of “Ree, Ree, Ree, Ree” — a Ree-petition derived from Aretha’s child- hood nickname. “Respect” is less than persua- sive as an addiction drama and vague in its sense of Franklin as a political fi gure, some nods to her performance at Dr. King’s funeral and her support for Angela Davis aside. But there’s an admirable discretion in the way Tommy and Wilson handle certain other aspects of their heroine’s trauma: Rather than rubbing the camera in her expe- riences of physical and sexual abuse, they reveal those experi- ences in increments, using stac- cato fl ashbacks that suggest the return of repressed memories — or, as they’re referred to here, her “demons.” “Respect” is fi ne, fi tfully rousing, even respectable. And sometimes, it’s something more. NEW INVENTORY!! Custom made jewelry! 214 W North St. • Enterprise, OR • 541-426-4824 Safe T Transport Company NOW HIRING DRIVERS! Chamber of Commerce www.gcoregonlive.com 301 W. Main Street, John Day, OR 541-575-0547 541-276-6813 Dispatcher@safettransport.com