Can this marriage be saved?
- Share via
The relationship drama “Not Easily Broken” comes from a novel by Pentecostal preacher T.D. Jakes, a novel that takes its title from an Old Testament passage about putting God at the center of marriage. The movie may be preaching to the choir -- and every inch of it feels like a sermon -- but it’s a pretty decent homily, heartfelt and strongly delivered by a committed cast headlined by Morris Chestnut and Taraji P. Henson.
Bishop Jakes, who leads the 26,000-member Potter’s House mega-church in south Dallas and wrote “Woman, Thou Art Loosed,” has been accused of preaching a gospel of prosperity, but the movie’s message of living within your means flies square in the face of that. One of the central problems in the crumbling, 10-year marriage between Dave (Chestnut) and Clarice (Henson) comes from her focus on status over substance, on Cadillacs over caring for her man. Dave wants kids; Clarice wants a career.
The movie -- directed by veteran Bill Duke (“A Rage in Harlem”) and adapted by Brian Bird -- isn’t exactly progressive when it comes to its view of women in the workplace. The filmmakers see “Not Easily Broken” as a male version of “Waiting to Exhale,” with the men (Eddie Cibrian and a funny Kevin Hart play Dave’s best friends) looking for love, support and a good game of hoops (not necessarily in that order).
Dave and Clarice eventually withdraw into self-pity, with Dave discovering feelings for a single, blond mother (Maeve Quinlan) who gives him the things he wants most, not to mention a child (Cannon Jay) to dote on. The movie navigates pretty soapy waters and throws in a completely unnecessary tragedy to goose the drama. But it also gives its characters dimension, including Dave’s shrill, meddling mother-in-law (Jenifer Lewis), who, it turns out, has her reasons for being bitter.
The underrated Chestnut and Henson, a likely Oscar nominee this year for playing the mother in “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” sell these scenes from a marriage for all they’re worth. “Not Easily Broken” isn’t perfect, but it is persuasive in its portrait of a husband and wife who must decide whether their frayed marriage is worth fighting to save.
--
--
‘Not Easily Broken’
MPAA rating: PG-13 for sexual references and thematic elements
Running time: 1 hour, 39 minutes
Playing: In general release
More to Read
Only good movies
Get the Indie Focus newsletter, Mark Olsen's weekly guide to the world of cinema.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.