The Old Settler is the story of two middle-aged sisters, Elizabeth and Quilly, who share an apartment in Harlem in 1943. The sisters quarrel amiably, but they share a wounded history that becomes revealed as the tale unfolds. An earnest but unworldly young man named Husband travels up from the South to board with the sisters while he searches for his beloved Lou Bessie, who left their small town a few years back to find a new life. Husband would like to bring Lou Bessie back home, but she's enamored with the excitement of the city, and her plans are more complicated. In time, Elizabeth and Husband begin a courtship that may or may not overcome their considerable age difference, while Quilly reacts disapprovingly.
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Please don't spend money on this.
Good concept, poorly executed.
This film is so real. It treats its characters with so much care and sensitivity.
This movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.
I found this movie on DVD at my local library. No surround sound and no extras, but a nice presentation anyway.The title needs to be understood first. Evidently an "old settler" was the slang used to describe a middle aged woman who was single and had no immediate prospects. Here Phylicia Rashad plays Elizabeth, an "old, old settler" in her early 50s but still looking good. But most of all is her personality, kind and gentle, the kind any good man would be attracted to.She shares her small apartment in WW II with her sister (and real life sister) Quilly (Debbie Allen), just a shade younger, but a whole lot more cynical. And most times hard to bear. She really gets charged up when she finds out that Elizabeth has corresponded with a man down south who is coming to Harlem and will rent their tiny extra room.Bumper Robinson plays Husband, a 20-something coming to town to find his girlfriend, Lou Bessy, from back home. She has gotten in with the wrong crowd, even has a small child being raised elsewhere by a relative. Husband (that's his name) finds her, but Lou Bessy isn't the girl he used to know. Meanwhile, he and Elizabeth, in spite of their age differences, begin to enjoy each other's company.SPOILERS. Husband and Elizabeth begin dating. They kiss. He tells her he has fallen in love with her. He wants to take her back home. He tells her he is finished with Lou Bessy who hangs out with the criminal element. He gives her a ring. But Quilly remains doubtful. She cautions her sister. Lou Bessy shows up, drunk, is disrespectful, Elizabeth throws her out of her apartment, slaps her, then Lou Bessy says as she is leaving, "I'm going to steal Husband from you just to show you I can." Elizabeth packs her things, waits for Husband, all night, he never shows up, Quilly was right, the movie ends with the two sisters once again holding onto each other, it may be all they have to depend on.
I've always liked Phylicia Rashad, and this was a pleasant surprise. It took about 30 seconds for me to be hooked. By the end, I was totally engrossed, and empathetic. We've all been stood up, or worse; left at the altar. Elisabeth was so confident and so trusting, and the viewer was right there with her. But in the end she was vulnerable and hurt. Great story, beautiful characterizations, powerful performances. Complex and bittersweet, just like the lives of most humans.
I happened to come across this movie quite by accident, and fell in love with the movie. Thank God that being single at 40 doesn't constitute being called an old settler, yet I really enjoyed the movie. I am also sad that they don't do more justice on this site about the movie.
I saw this film of a story written by Willa Cather twice on the local black public television network, out of Howard University. I wish I'd stayed to watch the credits, but I do know the names of two of the actors: Phylicia Rashad and Debbie Allen play sisters who, with several of their neighbors, move to Harlem from South Carolina to change their lives. Some of them change their names, but none of them changes his personality. Forty-something and terminally spinstered Rashad rents out a room in her Harlem home to a young man, named "Husband," from back home. They soon fall in love and he convinces her and the viewer that he is not like the other emigrants who have fallen into a life of drugs, theft and prostitution.Rashad and Allen show us black people as whites rarely see them in films: thoughtful, conservative, human. I don't know if you could rent this film, but it's worth seeing. And I don't know why IMDB doesn't have more information on it.Mag