WaPo | Sam Greenlee was underappreciated, disgruntled, professionally disemboweled and perpetually agitated.
NewYorker | Ivan Dixon’s 1973 film, “The Spook Who Sat by the Door,”
which is playing at Metrograph from Friday through Sunday (it’s also on
DVD and streaming), is a political fiction, based on a novel by Sam
Greenlee, about the first black man in the C.I.A. After leaving the
agency, the agent, Dan Freeman (Lawrence Cook) moves to Chicago, and
puts his training in guerrilla warfare to use: he organizes a group of
black gang members and Vietnam War veterans into a fighting force and
leads a violent uprising against the police, the National Guard, and the
city government. The film’s radical premise was noticed outside of
Hollywood: produced independently, the film was completed and released
by United Artists, but it was pulled from theatres soon after its
release. Its prints were destroyed; the negative was stored under
another title; and Greenlee (who died in 2014) claimed that the F.B.I. was involved in its disappearance, citing visits from agents to theatre owners who were told to pull the movie from screens. (No official documentation of these demands has emerged.)
On
these grounds alone, a viewing of “The Spook Who Sat By the Door” would
be a matter of urgent curiosity. But the movie is also a distinctive
and accomplished work of art, no mere artifact of the times but an
enduring experience. A supreme aspect of the art of movies is tone—the
sensory climate of a movie, which depends on the style and mood of
performance as much as the plot and the dialogue, the visual
compositions as well as the locations, costumes, and décor, the editing
and the music (often a sticking point), all of which are aligned
with—and sharpen and focus—the ideas that the movie embodies. Dixon—who
starred in one of the greatest of all independent films, Michael
Roemer’s “Nothing But a Man,”
from 1964 (and then spent five years on “Hogan’s Heroes”)—begins with a
tone bordering on sketch-like satire that soon crystallizes into a
sharp edge of restrained precision. A senator (a white man, played by
Joseph Mascolo) campaigning for reëlection finds that he needs the black
vote and decides to criticize the C.I.A. for having no black agents.
Even in his office, the senator speaks in a pompous, stentorian voice
seemingly inflated to a constant podium bluster.
0 comments:
Post a Comment