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Carmen Jones (1954)

6 | Oct 28, 1954 (US) | Drama, Romance | 01:45
Budget: 800 000 | Revenue: 9 800 000

Something Really New! Something Truly Different!

At an all-Black army camp, civilian parachute maker and "hot bundle" Carmen Jones is desired by many of the men. Naturally, she wants Joe, who's engaged to sweet Cindy Lou and about to go into pilot training for the Korean War.

Featured Crew

Director, Producer
Fight Choreographer
Title Designer
Lyricist, Book
Screenplay
Music Editor
Costume Design
Music Director

Cast

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Dorothy Dandridge
Carmen Jones
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Pearl Bailey
Frankie
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Olga James
Cindy Lou
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Joe Adams
Husky Miller
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Brock Peters
Sergeant Brown
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Roy Glenn
Rum Daniels
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Nick Stewart
Dink Franklin
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Le Vern Hutcherson
Joe (voice)

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
6 | Nov 21, 2022
To be frank, I struggled with this... Dorothy Dandridge is superb and both she and Harry Belafonte belt out Oscar Hammerstein II's lyrical adaptations of George Bizet's rousing comic opera tunefully; but not particularly stylishly. That may have been down to the relocation of the story from elegant 19th Century Seville to gritty 20th century North Carolina via which it loses much of the vigour and vibrancy of the original story. Instead, it depicts more of a tale of the aspirational grind of African Americans against poverty and oppression and so I found that rather hijacked the original sentiment, somewhat. The narrative is also, frequently, very disjointed. It was never meant to be a straightforward love story: "Carmen" isn't actually a very nice woman - and her noble lover "Joe" is really just a means to an end for her, leaving his fiancée "Cindy Lou" (Olga James) left high and dry in what is, essentially, a rather sad love triangle. Otto Preminger certainly went out on a limb with it - the extent to which 1950s America was ready for this was very much a gamble; but that doesn't make the film better than it actually is - a wonderfully erudite comment on social mobility and love in America that uses Bizet as it's vehicle; nothing more nothing less...