Second, don't worry, this post is spoiler free. Mostly. Mwahahahah! (JK, it really is spoiler-free.)
I'll start with 12 Years a Slave.
Directed by Steve McQueen, 2013
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Oh, this old trope again. |
I ask because I'm afraid that while racist attitudes still permeate so much of modern society, movies like this give us permission to feel okay about what's happening today, because hey! black people aren't slaves anymore! Hallelujah! Except that if you've seen the doc, The House I Live In (should be required viewing for every American), or read the book (am currently reading) The New Jim Crow, you will see how microscopically tiny we've actually moved the needle.
Or you know, if you've glimpsed any news about Trayvon Martin or Melissa Alexander.
Which is why we need films like Fruitvale Station.
Directed by Ryan Coogler (that last name!), 2009
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Let me show you what films can be about. |
Here's something about my family that I don't usually bring up because it's so weirdly sensational, and frankly, I hadn't seen this cousin since we were kids, but that only underscores how incidents like this — when they involve black people — are so commonplace that they can make local news and never reach national attention. So get ready for heavy. My cousin (Henry) Orlando Bryant was stunned to death by police officers in an Indiana family restaurant. We weren't very close, and most of you know I'm not close to any of my family at all, so it didn't really affect me personally. And unfortunately, I don't know much more than what's reported in the news, but clearly, there's way more stuff happening than ever gets the attention it needs and so when I see that someone is making yet another film that makes white people feel better about slavery (even by you, Brad Pitt), I want to smack them back to reality.
Hollywood, from now on, when you want to recognize an "important film", let's stop showering accolades on that old walnut about how America freed the slaves and start supporting films that get us out of our comfort zone. I know, tall order.
Rest in peace, cuz.