Calvin and Muad'Dib |
guardian | Lee Daniel's new film The Butler is a box office success, already generating Oscar buzz, but I am not interested in seeing it. I'm also skipping British filmmaker Steve McQueen's 12 Years a Slave, another movie about black people dealing with slavery.
I'm convinced these black race films are created for a white, liberal
film audience to engender white guilt and make them feel bad about
themselves. Regardless of your race, these films are unlikely to teach
you anything you don't already know. Frankly, why can't black people get
over slavery? Or, at least, why doesn't anyone want to see more
contemporary portrayals of black lives?
The narrow range of films
about the black life experience being produced by Hollywood is actually
dangerous because it limits the imagination, it doesn't allow real
progress to take place. Yet, sadly, these roles are some of the only
ones open to black talent. People want us to cheer that black actors
from The Butler and 12 Years a Slave are likely to be up for best actor
and actress awards, yet it feels like a throwback, almost to the Gone
with the Wind era.
I am not against revisiting the past, but there
are already numerous black films that have covered the civil rights era
and slavery. The quandary with black movies is they are overly fixated
on the past, only depicting black suffering in relation to race, which
is bizarre and peculiar.
Can a black film be created about black
people not focusing on race? Is race the only central conflict the
lives of people of colour?
I don't know about other black people,
but I don't sit around all day thinking only about the fact I am black.
I think about the problems in my life: the struggles, the joys, the
happiness, most of which don't involve the issue of race. As a black
person, I can honestly say I am exhausted and bored with these kinds of
"dramatic race" films.
I might have to turn in my black card, because I don't care much about slavery. I've already watched the television series Roots,
which I feel covered the subject matter extremely well. Of course, I
understand slavery is an important part of any black person's history,
but dwelling on slavery is pathetic. It ended in North America over 100
years ago, yet since Django Unchained made over $400m last year, more slavery movies emerge.
1 comments:
I'm with the author on this one. Those movies suck. My answer was that I was too Black to support Lee Daniels. For a while I thought I was the only one tired of seeing Black folks getting their asses kicked in movies. Supporting things like that looks wimpy after a while. Salute for posting this article.
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