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Monster's Ball (2001)
In Marc Forster's compelling romantic drama and
Oscar-winning film about an unlikely, racially-charged romantic pairing
- the film's title referred to the party held by executioners for
a condemned man on the night before his death; See Sex
in Films -
for uncensored version; it told about the unusual, inter-racial pairing
of a racist Georgia prison corrections officer with the widowed,
African-American wife of an executed death-row prisoner - his last
and most recent execution:
- the film presented a harrowing, racist portrayal
of a Georgia family - the Grotowskis:
- Hank Grotowski (Billy Bob Thornton), a widowed,
hard-drinking, emotionally-drained Georgia prison (death-row)
guard
- Buck (Peter Boyle), Hank's sick, emphysema-stricken
father whose wife had committed suicide
- Sonny (Heath Ledger), Hank's co-worker son -
a corrections-officer
- during lunch, Hank's father Buck expressed
his bigoted attitudes to Hank when he saw two young African-American
boys, Willie and Darryl Cooper (Charles Cowan Jr. and Taylor LaGrange),
walking up to the Grotowski house to speak to Sonny: ("What
the hell those n-----s doin' out there?...Damn porch monkeys. Be
movin' in here soon. Sittin' next to me. Watchin' my TV. There was
a time when they knew their place. Wasn't none of this mixin' goin'
on. Your mother, she hated them n-----s, too"); Hank was pressured
to go outside, confront Sonny with the boys, and scare them
off with two shotgun blasts into the air: ("Tell them to get
the hell off my property...I don't give a damn who you come by to
see. Get 'em outta here right now")
- in the film's most devastating scene, African-American
diner waitress Leticia Musgrove (Best Actress Oscar-winning Halle
Berry) said goodbye to her about-to-be-executed (by electric chair)
husband, Lawrence Musgrove (Sean "Diddy" Combs), who had
been on death row for 11 years; their obese-overweight son Tyrell
(Coronji Calhoun) was also present; they made small talk about her
broken-down car and their eviction and loss of the house due to her
inability to make the payments
Goodbye Scene Before Lawrence Musgrove's Execution
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Leticia Musgrove (Halle Berry)
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Tyrell's (Coronji Calhoun) Last Hug For His Father
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- while awaiting his execution in his cell, Lawrence
drew portrait sketches of both Sonny
and Hank, guards in the prison - and he told them: "I've always
believed that a portrait captures a person far better than a photograph.
It truly takes a human bein' to really see a human bein'"
- abusive mother Leticia
displaced her anger by berating her son for being so fat, as she
forced him to get on a scale - his weight was 189: ("What the
hell is this, Tyrell? What'd I tell you about eating this s--t? Didn't
I tell you don't be eating that s--t? Look at this! Look at all this
fat! This fat, fat ass! Look at all this nasty fat! Where they at?
Look at all this candy. You ain't gonna eat all this candy! You crazy?
Look at this room. It's a mess. Why is it a mess, Tyrell? 'Cause
a fat little piggy lives in this room! Get your ass on this scale.
Get on the scale! What does it say? What's it say?...189. You ain't
lost no weight!")
Musgrove's Electric Chair Execution
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Hank's Attack on Sonny in the Prison Bathroom For
Ruining Lawrence's Execution
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- after the intense death row execution of Lawrence
Musgrove, Hank viciously attacked his son Sonny in the prison's
bathroom for vomiting during the prisoner's last walk, for ruining
everything, and for being a "pussy": ("Are you listenin'
to me? Do you know what you did? Do you know what you did? You f--ked
him up! You f--ked up that man's last walk! How would you like it
if somebody f--ked up your last walk? You're like a goddamn woman.
You're like your f--kin' mother! You shouldn't have done that, you
son of a bitch! Get up, you f--kin' p---y! Come here! You are a piece
of f--kin' s--t! Do you understand me?")
- the film's most shocking sequence was the sudden suicide
of Hank's estranged son Sonny in the Grotowski's living room; when
Hank ordered Sonny to leave the house for good, Sonny brandished
a gun and asked his hateful father: ("You
lousy piece of s--t. Get up....See? How do you like that, huh? Huh?
Come on! Are you a tough guy now? Are you tough? Say somethin'. Say
somethin'! Get up. You hate me? Answer me. You hate me, don't you?");
Hank replied calmly that he had always hated his son: ("Yeah,
I hate you. I always did"), causing Sonny to lethally shoot himself directly in the chest with
a gun after telling his father: ("Well, I always loved you")
- afterwards, Hank buried Sonny's
body in the backyard, and burned his Department of Corrections uniform
in a fire - after resigning from his job as Deputy Warden; he admitted
to his Pop: ("I quit the team...I can't do it anymore"), although his father
was disappointed in him and disapproved of his decision to be a quitter:
("That was a mistake...You're remindin' me of your mother....Your mother
wasn't s--t. That woman failed me. I got more p---y after she killed
herself than I did when she was livin' as my wife. The point is,
she quit on me. You're doin' the same")
- one very rainy night, Hank drove on the highway, passing
by now single-mom Leticia who was cradling her mortally-injured
son in her arms by the side of the road; they were
the victims of a hit-and-run
accident when the two were walking down the highway and no one would
stop to help; Hank returned and drove them to the hospital, where Leticia
expressed intense hurt and pain (and banged on the glass:
"That's my baby!") upon learning that her son died due to his injuries
- both Hank and Leticia were soon reunited by their
common and respective grief for their deceased young sons; he tentatively
began a relationship with the emotionally-devastated widow, who
worked at a diner that he often frequented
- while drinking together in her place, Hank
and Leticia talked about her difficult life and her efforts to be a
good mother to her very ravenous and fat deceased son: "I was
a good mother. I was a really good mom. I didn't want him to be fat
like that. I did not want my baby to be fat like that, 'cause I know,
a black man in America, you can't be like that, and I tried to...
I was just trying to tell him you can't be like that. You can't be
like that in America and a black man"
- then, the emotionally-devastated
widow expressed her raw, intensely
sexual, animalistic and volatile nature by engaging in love-making
after begging to be made to feel better: "I was just... I'm not
sure... I'm not sure what you want me to do. I want... You know what
I want. I want you to make me feel better....Just make me feel good.
I just want you to make me feel good. Can you make me feel good?...Just
make me feel good...I want- I want to feel good. I want to feel.
Fill me up. Fill me up. Fill me up. Oh, my God. Fill me. Fill me"
Hank's Start of a Relationship with Leticia:
The "Make...Me...Feel...Good" Scene
with Leticia
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- when Leticia visited Hank's
home to bring him a gift (an expensive white cowboy hat) after
he had offered her Sonny's truck, Hank's extremely-racist father
Buck fashioned the hat and then insultingly told Leticia that the
only reason Hank was interested in her was for sex with a black
female: ("Damn! Hank must've done somethin' right to deserve a fine hat like this....In
my prime, I had a thing for n----r juice myself. Hank just like
his daddy. He ain't a man till he split dark oak"); Buck's
raw, offensive and racist comments caused Leticia to break up with
Hank
- angry with his father, Hank decided to cut off ties
with his father by placing him in a nursing home; meanwhile, Leticia
was evicted and was invited by Hank to live in his house; although
Leticia discovered that Hank oversaw and participated in her husband's
execution (she found her husband's drawings) and was deeply disturbed,
the two were able to reconnect during a love scene when he offered to give her
oral sex ("Can I touch you?"), and she gave her permission
- in the film's final reconciliation scene, Hank and
Leticia sat on the front porch eating ice cream together; after
offering her a bite of chocolate ice cream to eat, he assured her:
"I think we're gonna be alright"
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Hank's Racist Father Buck (Peter Boyle)
Due to His Father's Bigotry, Hank Ordered Two Black Boys
Off His Property
"Lawrence Musgrove Dies Tonight"
Before His Execution, Musgrove Sketched Sonny's and Hank's
Portraits
With Displaced Anger, Leticia Berated Her Overweight Son
Tyrell
Hank's Son Sonny (Heath Ledger) Suicidally Took
His Own Life in Front of His Father After Vowing: "I
Always Loved You"
Hank's Burning of His Prison Uniform: "I Quit
the Team"
Leticia's Grief Over Her Son's Death: "That's
my baby!"
Leticia - A Waitress
Buck's Racist Insults at
Leticia: ("Hank Just Like His Daddy...")
Love Scene After Hank Asked Leticia: "Can I Touch You?"
Ending Porch Scene: Eating Ice Cream Together
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