The Long Walk Home
The Long Walk Home is a 1990 American historical drama film starring Sissy Spacek and Whoopi Goldberg, and directed by Richard Pearce.
Set in Alabama, it is based on a screenplay about the Montgomery bus boycott by John Cork and a short film by the same name, produced by students at the University of Southern California in 1988.
Origins
The feature film is based on a short screenplay and film of the same name, written by John Cork, then a graduate student in directing at USC. He had submitted his script to the Cinema Department for consideration, hoping also to direct it. While USC selected Cork's script for production, the department assigned Beverlyn E. Fray, another student, to direct it.The scenario on which the film is based, actually happened to Cork and his maid, Elizabeth Gregory Taylor, in his hometown of Montgomery, Alabama.
The short film won several awards, including first place at the Black American Cinema Society. Cork, however, was unhappy with the finished project and unsuccessfully tried to block screenings of the short film.
Plot
The film was expanded as a feature.Set in Montgomery, Alabama, United States, during the 1955 Montgomery bus boycott, it follows Odessa Cotter, an African-American woman who works as a maid/nanny for Miriam Thompson. Odessa and her family confront typical issues faced by African Americans in the South at the time: poverty, racism, segregation, and violence. The black community has begun a widespread boycott of the city-owned buses to end segregation; Odessa is forced to take long walks both ways to work.
Miriam Thompson offers to give her a ride two days a week to ensure she gets to work on time and to lessen the fatigue her "long walk home" is causing. Around the city, some informal carpools and other systems are starting, but most of the black residents are forced to walk to work.
As the boycott continues, tensions rise in the city. Black residents have been the majority riders on the city-owned buses, and the system is suffering financially. Miriam's decision to support Odessa by giving her a ride becomes an issue with her husband, Norman Thompson, and other prominent members of the white community who want the boycott to end. Miriam has to choose between what she believes is right or succumb to pressure from her husband and their friends.
After an argument with her husband, Miriam decides to follow her heart. She becomes involved in a carpool group to help other black workers like Odessa. In the film's final scene, Miriam and her daughter Mary Catherine, who is the narrator of the story in flashback, join Odessa and the other protesters in standing against oppression.
Cast
- Sissy Spacek as Miriam Thompson
- Whoopi Goldberg as Odessa Cotter
- Dwight Schultz as Norman Thompson
- Ving Rhames as Herbert Cotter
- Dylan Baker as Tunker Thompson
- Erika Alexander as Selma Cotter
- Lexi Randall as Mary Catherine
- Richard Parnell Habersham as Theodore Cotter
- Jason Weaver as Franklin Cotter
- Crystal Robbins as Sara Thompson
- Cherene Snow as Claudia
- Chelcie Ross as Martin
- Dan Butler as Charlie
- Philip Sterling as Winston
- Michael Sansom as Eugene
- Schuyler Fisk as Judy
- Mary Steenburgen as Narrator
Development
Cinematographer John Bailey was to have made his directorial debut on this film but was replaced by Richard Pearce early into production.
Release
The film was released theatrically on December 21, 1990. In the U.S., it gained another theatrical release in March 1991 after Miramax withdrew the film from its limited December 1990 release due to the heavy competition of the 1990 holiday season.After the film's theatrical run, it was released to videocassette by Live Home Video in the United States and in Canada that same year by Cineplex Odeon.
In 2002, the film was released twice on DVD by Platinum Disc and Artisan Entertainment, both presented in full-screen without bonus features. Both DVDs are now discontinued. On January 29, 2013, a new DVD was released by Lionsgate, under license from Miramax. It is still in full-screen and does not contain any bonus features. A widescreen DVD is available in Spain.
Reception
Critical response
The Long Walk Home received mostly positive reviews from critics.Roger Ebert gave the film three and a half out of four stars, praising the performances by Spacek and Goldberg, while criticizing some aspects of the film, like the inclusion of a white "narrator".