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How Stella Got Her Groove Back
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Terry McMillan and Ron Bass wrote this screenplay based on McMillan's semi-autobiographical best-selling novel (over 2,000,000 copies in print before the release of this film). San Francisco stockbroker Stella (Angela Bassett), a 40-year-old divorcee, has a nice Marin County home and an 11-year-old son, Quincy (Michael J. Pagan). With Quincy off to see his dad, Stella and her best friend Delilah (Whoopi Goldberg) vacation in Jamaica, where she meets sexy, good-looking Winston Shakespeare (Taye Diggs). He's the man of her dreams in every way except one -- he's half her age. Even so, a romance develops. Grammy Award-winning songwriters Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis supervised the film's music and produced the R&B-slanted soundtrack album. Shown at the 1998 Urbanworld Film Festival (NY). ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
With its swaying palms and breezy ocean vistas, as vicariously relaxing as anything on film, How Stella Got Her Groove Back starts like a study of rejuvenation, a restorative experience for both the title character and the viewer. But like the book on which it was based, Kevin Rodney Sullivan's film loses some impact when it retreats home to the United States and becomes a melodrama, tackling such diverse topics as disease, family, and May-December romance. To be sure, Angela Bassett and Whoopi Goldberg bring oodles of sisterly chemistry and screen presence, and Taye Diggs, in his film debut, looks exquisitely at ease as a studly charmer. Watching these elements intermingle against a gorgeous backdrop would have been excuse enough for a film. Perhaps Terry McMillan's book should have stopped there, because once Stella relocates her groove, the plot slides into the rather ordinary story of unlikely lovers trying to overcome their differences. The movie has the strange feeling of reaching its catharsis and then pursuing its plot threads past the point where the credits should have rolled. Minus a half-hour from its 124 minutes, How Stella Got Her Groove Back would have been more effective escapism, while still able to touch on some of the deeper concerns of these women. With its additional agendas, it's still worthwhile -- it's just not quite as groovy. ~ Derek Armstrong, All Movie Guide
 



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