Content warning: reference to sexual assault, reference to mass suicide
In 1902, two cousins from very different lives return to their home, a small island off the coast of Georgia founded by freed slaves. Viola (Cheryl Lynn Bruce) has brought a photographer (Tommy Hicks) with her to document the departure of the majority of the remaining family to the modern North. "Yellow" Mary (Barbara-O) has brought her lover, Trula (Trula Hoosier). The family matriarch, Nana (Cora Lee Day), fears that the old ways will be lost once they lose the connection to the land of their birth.
It's a multi-generational, multi-character story told in the Gullah dialect of the Atlantic islands of the southern U.S. The cinematography is lush and dream-like, aided by new-agey/world music synth scoring. The costumes and details are fantastic. The plot can be a little hard to follow if you're not really paying attention to who is who, so stay off your phone during this one.
Written and directed by Julie Dash, this is the first feature directed by an African-American woman to receive a theatrical screening in the U.S. In 1991. So, I was in 3rd grade before we got a movie by a Black woman on a movie screen. Cool cool. Anyway, this is streaming on the Criterion Channel, as it should.