Joyful Noise (2012)
Joyful Noise is a 2012 musical comedy-drama film starring Queen Latifah and Dolly Parton. The movie follows the story of a small-town gospel choir that is struggling to stay together. Despite the choir's struggles, the movie is filled with uplifting moments and plenty of musical numbers.
One of the most memorable scenes in the movie is when the choir's director, Vi Rose Hill (Queen Latifah), and her love interest, Randy (Kris Kristofferson), share a passionate kiss. The kiss is a pivotal moment in the movie, as it marks the beginning of a romantic relationship between the two characters. The kiss is also a reminder of the importance of love and passion in life.
Another memorable scene in the movie is when Vi Rose and her daughter, Olivia (Keke Palmer), share a dance. The dance is a beautiful moment between mother and daughter, and it serves as a reminder of the importance of family. The dance also serves as a reminder of the importance of expressing love and affection for one another.
The movie also features a few other sexual moments. One of the most memorable is when Vi Rose and Randy share a passionate embrace. The embrace is a reminder of the power of love and the importance of expressing one's feelings.
Overall, Joyful Noise is a movie that is filled with uplifting moments and plenty of musical numbers. The movie also features a few sexual moments that serve as reminders of the power of love and the importance of expressing one's feelings.
An man and a woman kiss rub each others' buttocks; we later see the woman in her kitchen as she takes breakfast to the man, who is now in her bed (sex is implied) and apparently dead. No nudity.
A teen boy and a teen girl flirt throughout the film, smiling at each other, giggling, kissing a few times briefly and holding hands, and she tells him that her mother does not allow her to date, but jokes with him and walks away with an exaggerated hip wiggle to make him laugh; later, in his kitchen, they embrace and kiss briefly and his grandmother pulls them apart while telling them to stop.
A man and a woman embrace twice.
A woman tells her pastor that she will become known as "tap her and die," meaning that any man that has sex with her will die.
A pastor at a funeral says the deceased loved life as his wife replies, "The man had 5 kids; he loved something."
A teen boy tells a teen girl, "Let's make babies that look like you" and she laughs.
A man speaks to a woman, saying, "You got big ole lungs on you," referring to her breasts and she looks surprised.
An African-American mother tells her daughter to be careful of cake that stays in the stomach for nine months and becomes a cracker, meaning, "Don't have sex, get pregnant unmarried and have a white baby."
A woman tells another woman that if God punished people for having unmarried sex, then most men would be dead by their senior year in high school.
A woman tells a man, "You country people marry three times and still have the same in-laws."
Two teen boys play piano and sing, "I'm in love with a stripper."
A few women at a dance club wear backless dresses that reveal bare backs.
Several women at parties and concerts wear low-cut blouses that reveal some cleavage.
In a concert competition several women wear sleeveless dresses that are low-cut and reveal cleavage.
A teen boy sits shirtless at a kitchen table while his grandmother puts peroxide on a scrape on his face.