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Mr. Movie: James Earl Jones Part 3

Continuing with the incredible career of James Earl Jones, who lived to be 93 and compiled a movie list the envy of many.
 

Matewan (1987) is the somewhat true story of the bloody miner’s strike of the Stone Mountain Coal Company in Matewan, West Virginia. Chris Cooper, in his debut appearance, portrays Joe Kenehan, who is a union organizer. Jones plays one of the miners with the wonderful name of “Few Clothes” Johnson. As mediation efforts flag, the violence grows incrementally. Who wins? Nobody.
 

Whether you like or hate Coming To America (1988) probably depends on your opinion of Eddie Murphy, the catalyst for this film. Murphy wrote the story for the film and has the lead role as crown prince Akeem of the fictional African country Zamunda. He grows tired of his entitled lifestyle and particularly of the fiancé picked by his parents. So he decides to travel to America to find a woman he can love and who can love him for himself. Jones plays appropriately intense King Jaffe, Akeem’s father. There is a sequel that isn’t even as good as the original.

 

Field of Dreams (1989) is a wonderful film about baseball and dreams coming true. Kevin Costner is Ray Kinsella, owner of a corn farm in Iowa. Inside his field he hears a disembodied voice say, “If you build it, he will come.” And he has a vision of disgraced Black Sox scandal Shoeless Joe Jackson (Ray Liotta) playing on a baseball field at the Kinsella farm. So Ray convinces his wife (Amy Madigan) that he should build the field. And they come. Jones portrays Terrence Mann, whose books have been summarily banned in Iowa. Ray is a fan and gets Mann to come to the ballfield. The rest is, well, magic!

 

Sommersby (1993) stars Richard Gere as Jack Sommersby (or not) who has been missing from home for six years after fighting in the Civil War. Laurel Sommersby (Jodie Foster) begins to suspect this guy isn’t her husband. But — she likes him a whole lot better than the original. Jack winds up charged with murder and desertion before Judge Isaacs (Jones). The judge gives him the choice of choosing the name that will hang him or the one that will just try him for desertion. This film is the American take on the lookalike French classic The Return of Martin Guerre.
 

Cry, The Beloved Country (1995) is a star turn for Jones, as he portrays Rev. Stephen Kumalo. He is called to Johannesburg by the church and discovers that his son is accused of murdering a white man. James Jarvis (Richard Harris) is the father of the murdered boy. The two meet and against all odds find they share certain aspects of humanity. The film is based on Alan Paton’s novel of the same name. It is also the second configuration of this story. The 1951 version with Sidney Poitier is just as good.

 

Jones has a hat trick as Admiral Greer in the thrilling Hunt For Red October (1990), in Patriot Games (1982) and in Clear and Present Danger (1994). He’s good in all of them. 

 

All of the movies in this article are for grown-ups.