The Butler (marketed as Lee Daniels' The Butler) is a 2013 American historical drama film directed by Lee Daniels, written by Danny Strong, and featuring an ensemble cast. Loosely based on the real-life of Eugene Allen, the film stars Forest Whitaker as Cecil Gaines, an African-American who eyewitnesses notable events of the 20th century during his 34-year tenure serving as a White House butler. It was the last film produced by Laura Ziskin, who died in 2011.
The film was theatrically released by The Weinstein Company on August 16, 2013 to mostly positive reviews.
Plot
The film begins in 2009, where an elderly Cecil Gaines recounts his life story, while waiting in the White House. Gaines was raised in a cotton plantation in 1920s Macon, Georgia, by his sharecropping parents. One day, the farm's temperamental owner, Thomas Westfall, rapes Cecil's mother, Hattie Pearl. Cecil's father, Earl, confronts Westfall, and is shot dead. Cecil is taken in by Annabeth Westfall, the estate's caretaker, who reassigns Cecil to being a house servant instead. In his teens, he leaves behind the Westfall plantation and his mother, who has been mute since the incident. One night, Cecil breaks into a pastry shop and is, unexpectedly, hired by the owners. While working in the shop, he acquires skills from the master servant, Maynard. After several years, Maynard recommends Cecil for a position in a Washington D.C. hotel which Cecil accepts. While working at the hotel, Cecil meets Gloria, and the couple have two children: Louis and Charlie. In 1957, Cecil is hired by the White House during Dwight D. Eisenhower's administration, where White House maƮtre d' Freddie Fallows shows Cecil the grounds and introduces him to head butler Carter Wilson and co-worker James Holloway. Working in the White House, Cecil witnesses first hand Eisenhower's reluctance to use troops to enforce school desegregation in the South, then the President's resolve to uphold the law by ordering to racially integrate a high school in Little Rock.
The Gaines family celebrates Cecil's new occupation with their closest friends and neighbors, Howard and Gina. Louis, the eldest son, becomes a first generation university student at Fisk University in Tennessee. Cecil is hesitant about this because he thinks the South is too volatile and encourages Louis to enroll at Howard University. Louis joins a student program led by James Lawson, to peacefully engage in a sit-in at a segregated diner and is arrested. Furious, Cecil heads to Nashville where he confronts Louis for disobeying him. Gloria, feeling isolated from her husband, becomes an alcoholic and reluctantly engages in a brief affair with the Gaineses' neighbor, Howard.
In 1961, after John F. Kennedy's election, Louis and a dozen others are attacked by the Ku Klux Klan while traveling on a bus in Alabama. Kennedy, spurred by the nation's growing turbulence, delivers a national address proposing the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Several months after the speech, Kennedy is assassinated and his successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, enacts the transformative legislation into law. As a goodwill gesture, Jackie Kennedy presents Cecil with one of the former president's neckties before she leaves the White House.
In the late 1960s, after civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr.'s assassination, Louis returns home and tells his family that he and a few others have founded a chapter of the radical organization called the Black Panthers. Aware of Richard Nixon's plans to suppress the movement and upset at his son's actions, Cecil orders Louis and his girlfriend, Carol, to leave his house. Louis is soon arrested and is bailed out by Carter. The Gaineses' other son, Charlie, confides to Louis that he plans to join American forces in the war in Vietnam, to which Louis admits that he wouldn't attend his funeral if he were to be killed. Indeed, a few months later, the Gaines family hold a funeral for Charlie, which Louis does not attend, much to the dismay of his enraged father. However, when the Black Panthers begin to exercise violence in response to racial confrontations, Louis leaves the organization and returns to college, earning his master's degree in political science and eventually winning a seat in Congress.
Meanwhile, Cecil's professional reputation has grown to the point that in the 1980s, he is invited by Ronald and Nancy Reagan as a guest to a state dinner. Cecil realizes that the invitation was just for show, as Reagan plans to veto any Congressional sanctions against South Africa. Cecil announces his resignation to the President, but not before gaining Reagan's support in his years-long effort to have the black White House staff receive the same rate of salary and opportunities for career advancement as their white counterparts.
Gloria, wanting Cecil to mend his estranged relationship with Louis, reveals to him that Louis once told her that he loved and respected them both. Realizing his son's actions to be heroic rather than antagonistic, Cecil joins Louis in a protest against South African apartheid.
The film then advances to Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign, where an elderly Gloria dies shortly before Obama is elected as the nation's first African-American president, a milestone which leaves Cecil and Louis in awe. The film ends with Cecil preparing to meet the inaugurated Obama in the White House.
Cast
Forest Whitaker as Cecil Gaines, the film's main character, who dedicates his life to becoming a professional domestic worker. Aml Ameen portrays a young Cecil.
Gaines' private life
- Oprah Winfrey as Gloria Gaines, Cecil's wife.
- David Oyelowo as Louis Gaines, the Gaineses' eldest and most volatile son.
- Elijah Kelley as Charlie Gaines, the Gaineses' youngest son.
- David Banner as Earl Gaines, Cecil's father, who is killed by Thomas Westfall.
- Mariah Carey as Hattie Pearl, Cecil's mother.
- Terrence Howard as Howard, the Gaineses' neighbor who romantically pursues Gloria.
- Adriane Lenox as Gina.
- Yaya DaCosta as Carol Hammie, Louis's girlfriend.
- Alex Pettyfer as Thomas Westfall, the temperamental plantation owner who kills Earl after Earl protests Westfall's raping Cecil's mother.
- Vanessa Redgrave as Annabeth Westfall, an elderly cotton farm caretaker who makes Cecil a house servant following the death of his father.
- Clarence Williams III as Maynard, an elderly man who mentors a young Cecil and introduces him to his profession.
- Cuba Gooding, Jr. as Carter Wilson, the fast-talking head butler at the White House who becomes a longtime friend of Cecil's.
- Lenny Kravitz as James Holloway, a co-worker butler and friend of Cecil's at the White House.
- Colman Domingo as Freddie Fallows, the White House maitre d' who hires Cecil.
- Robin Williams as Dwight D. Eisenhower, the 34th President of the United States.
- James DuMont as Sherman Adams, Eisenhower's White House Chief of Staff.
- Robert Aberdeen as Herbert Brownell, Jr., Eisenhower's Attorney General.
- James Marsden as John F. Kennedy, the 35th President.
- Minka Kelly as First Lady Jackie Kennedy.
- Liev Schreiber as Lyndon B. Johnson, the 36th President.
- John Cusack as Richard Nixon, the 37th President.
- Alex Manette as H. R. Haldeman, Nixon's White House Chief of Staff.
- Colin Walker as John Ehrlichman, Nixon's White House Counsel.
- Alan Rickman as Ronald Reagan, the 40th President.
- Jane Fonda as First Lady Nancy Reagan.
- Stephen Rider as Stephen W. Rochon, Barack Obama's White House Chief Usher.
- Nelsan Ellis as Martin Luther King, Jr..
- Jesse Williams as civil rights activist James Lawson.
- Danny Strong, the film's screenwriter, makes a cameo appearance as one of the Freedom Riders who are attacked in Alabama.
Presidents Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, and Barack Obama and civil rights leader Jesse Jackson are depicted in archival footage.
Melissa Leo and Orlando Eric Street were cast as First Lady Mamie Eisenhower and Barack Obama, respectively, but did not appear in the finished film.
See more at : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_Daniels%27_The_Butler
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