[In honor of Martin
Luther King Jr. Day, a week’s series on histories and stories salient to
understanding and engaging with the life and legacy of one of our greatest Americans.
Please add your responses and other MLK connections for a crowd-sourced weekend
post!]
On what’s very
inspiring, and what might be more problematic, about the new film.
This is a great
time for films about African American stories and histories. Steve McQueen,
director most recently of 12
Years a Slave (for my money the
best film to date about African American history, and on my short list of
best films about American history period), has announced that his
next project will focus on the amazing life of actor, performer, athlete,
activist, and icon Paul
Robeson. One of the breakout stars of McQueen’s film, Lupita Nyong’o, is set
to star in an upcoming film adapation of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s stunning
novel Americanah
(2013). And there’s no need to wait for those two future films—in theaters now
is Ava DuVernay’s historical and
political drama Selma, perhaps the first mainstream
American film to focus centrally on portraying histories and stories of the
Civil Rights movement from African American perspectives.
That last phrase
is one main reason I find DuVernay’s film so inspiring. There have certainly
been prominent and successful films about the Civil Rights movement: Mississippi
Burning (1988) and Driving Miss Daisy (1989),
to name two of the most acclaimed. But I would argue that both of those, like
similar but more slight films such as The
Long Walk Home (1990) and Ghosts of Mississippi
(1996), have approached Civil Rights and African American history through the
lens of white protagonists and perspectives—perhaps an understandable choice, and
one that (as I would argue Glory
[1989] proves) does not render it impossible to connect with African American histories,
but also a necessarily limiting starting point. I haven’t had the chance to see
Selma yet, but it seems clear that
its protagonists and central perspectives are King, his wife Coretta Scott
King, and other Civil Rights activists and leaders (such as James Bevel, the principal
architect of the Selma march). The fact that this groundbreaking film was
directed by an up-and-coming
female filmmaker who was born seven years after the Selma march? Well, that’s
just one more inspiring detail.
Ironically,
given this inspiring reversal in racial emphasis and perspectives, the one
critique of Selma I’ve encountered
has been of its
portrayal of President Lyndon Johnson as an adversary to King and the Selma
march. That op ed was written by Joseph
Califano Jr., one of Johnson’s principal domestic advisors for most of his
presidency, which both lends it an air of accuracy yet also means it comes from
a subjective point of view to be sure. And again, as of this late-December
writing I haven’t had a chance to see DuVernay’s film yet, so I should try to
reserve judgment. But if the film does set up Johnson as an adversary in the
ways Califano suggests, I would say two things: that’s an understandable and
reasonable storytelling choice, one that certainly highlights the substantial
national opposition faced by King and his fellow activists; but nonetheless, on
the spectrum of white American responses to the Civil Rights Movement, I would
put Johnson toward the positive end for sure. And if Selma helps us think and talk about such questions, that’d be one
more inspiring effect of the film.
Next MLK story
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Responses or other connections you’d share for the weekend post?
PPS. After I scheduled this post, DuVernay responded passionately and convincingly to Califano's criticisms.
PPPS. And long after, I had a chance to see the film, understood even more fully the motivations behind such choices, and wrote this piece about it: http://talkingpointsmemo.com/cafe/selma-did-distort-history-and-was-right-to-do-so
PPS. After I scheduled this post, DuVernay responded passionately and convincingly to Califano's criticisms.
PPPS. And long after, I had a chance to see the film, understood even more fully the motivations behind such choices, and wrote this piece about it: http://talkingpointsmemo.com/cafe/selma-did-distort-history-and-was-right-to-do-so
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