What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that tweens and teens who like
musicals,
"American Idol," and Beyoncé will be eager to see
this much-hyped Broadway adaptation. Several scenes of drug
abuse are used to symbolically link excessiveness, addiction,
and depression in "show business." Images include snorting
lines of cocaine and smoking marijuana. Characters also drink
heavily (often to drunkenness and sometimes hidden from
others), smoke cigarettes, argue loudly, and engage in a fight
or two. Some relatively mild -- but quite colorful -- language
(mostly, several uses of "s--t" and "hell").
Families can discuss the film's connection to the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s and '70s. How does this historical context affect the characters' choices? How does it affect the relationship between ambition and happiness? Families can also talk about the film's messages about the entertainment industry. How do the characters change when fame arrives? How does the movie link drug use with the difficulties of the music business? Also, consider the musical as a form. What is the effect of characters breaking into song to express their feelings within a film that's focused on music as an industry?
Common Sense Media Review
"Dreamgirls" is a big, boomy musical, energetic and
well-crafted. But it has something else on its mind as well.
The latest in a series of Broadway shows translated to the big
screen just in time for Oscar nominations, it benefits from
casting actual singers: Both
Beyoncé
Knowles and erstwhile
"American
Idol"
contestant Jennifer Hudson are brilliant, whether belting
songs, fine-timing comedy, or conveying heartbreak.
Directed by Bill Condon, who wrote the screenplay for "Chicago," "Dreamgirls" is based on the same-named Broadway musical that opened in 1981 and famously borrowed from the real-life saga of Diana Ross and the Supremes (here the group is called the Dreamettes, then the Dreams). Naïve young women are manipulated by scheming, ambitious men, and only late in their lives realize that their original friendship is most important. Embracing the music of its moment, from Motown to pop to disco, "Dreamgirls" also deals with the racism that helps shape the girls' careers. As they strive to break through to mainstream (white) audiences, they also negotiate with their own identities.
The film opens at a 1962 Detroit talent contest, where the Dreamettes -- Deena (Knowles), Lorrell (Anika Noni Rose), and lead singer Effie (Hudson) -- get what seems like a once-in-a-lifetime chance to sing back-up for the already fading, James Brown-like R&B star James "Thunder" Early ( Eddie Murphy). His wily manager, Curtis ( Jamie Foxx, playing a character inspired by Motown Records founder Berry Gordy), sees in the girl group the chance to cross over.
Though Curtis is romancing Effie and appreciates her phenomenal talent, he also believes that the group will be more saleable if fronted by Deena, who's more "conventionally" beautiful (again, closer to a white standard), as well as less demanding and more willing to compromise in order to achieve her "dream" of stardom. The switch not only angers James (who turns to drugs), but also upsets the women's longstanding dynamic.
While its plot is never surprising, "Dreamgirls" highlights the cost of ambition within an industry in which race and gender shape opportunities and expectations for artists, producers, and consumers. Effie's insistent "blackness" limits her commercial appeal, and her story, reeling from joy to tragedy to triumph, exposes how such limits are a function of both blatant and subtle forms of racism. Whether peole navigate, internalize, or confront it, they're always affected by it in some way.
When, for instance, Effie learns that Curtis is not only dropping her from the group but has also been sleeping with Deena, her stunning number, "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going" (with the poignant lyric, "You're gonna love me"), speaks directly to the film's most compelling theme: that broader U.S. culture and politics have long exploited, feared, and loved black culture and politics. In this potent, gorgeous, and devastating moment, Effie declares her need and her defiance. Here, the movie shows how history and art pervade our present.
Families who like this movie might also want to see "Chicago," "What's Love Got to Do With It," "Lady Sings the Blues," or "The Wiz" (the latter two star Ross).
Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.

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