I
usually don’t pay much attention to the Academy Awards unless
African American actors are nominated and win or unless African
American themed films have an opportunity. This year, I am paying
much attention, what with Fences, Hidden Figures, and Moonlight among
the nominees for Best Picture, and with Denzel Washington (Fences),
Ruth Negga (Loving), Mahershala Ali (Moonlight), Viola Davis
(Fences), Naomie Harris (Moonlight) and Octavia Spencer (Hidden
Figures) up for best actor/actress or supporting actor/actress roles.
To be sure, I think that there should have been more nominations
for Hidden Figures, and that Denzel should have been nominated for a
directing award. But we all know the Academy “ain’t
fair”. Let’s see what the outcomes are.
One
of the more difficult choices may be the choice for Best Documentary.
Two films that rocked my world have both been nominated. Raoul
Peck’s I Am Not Your Negro was riveting and had me sitting at
the edge of my seat. James Baldwin had always been a searing critic
of race matters in these United States. To see his wit and wisdom
come to life reminded me of how passionately he cared, and how
wittily he responded, to some of the questions too often raised about
Black life. To hear Samuel Jackson’s voice-over of Baldwin’s
words, and to combine that with some of the Peck-inspired visuals, is
absorbing. The multi-media experience raises questions about
stereotypes that reign in film, even in cartoons, and how these
stereotypes shape the way African Americans are perceived and treated
in our nation. I have never experienced such silence in the theatre,
a few uh-hums, but none of the whispered conversation typical of a
movie experience. I’ve seen the documentary once, and plan to
see it again, both because I was a big Baldwin fan, and also because
the movie is sharing immutable facts that many would like to forget.
The
other film nominated for Best Documentary is Ava DuVernay’s
13th, an examination of the relationship between the 13th Amendment
to the Constitution (the one that outlaws involuntary servitude,
except when one is convicted of a crime) and the current system of
mass incarceration. DuVernay is masterful in connecting stereotypes
of Black people to the way the criminal justice system treats us, in
weaving voices of luminaries like Angela Davis, Michelle Alexander,
and Jelani Cobb with footage of police violence in Ferguson, Mo, and
in using the voices of the formerly incarcerated to examine the
system. When I saw 13th, I sat next to a sister who sobbed her way
through the last moments of the movie. 13th leaves must to sob
about, much to shake one’s head about, much to become enraged
and energized about. The adage “follow the money” is
never more pointed than it is when we look at issues of mass
incarceration. Predatory capitalists are making profits on
everything from maggot-infested meals served to telephone calls, and
inmates and their families are the losers. This movie is a call to
action.
There
is much overlapping material in these two films, and I’d not
advise anyone to see both films on the same day. Both films enrich
us, and I’d be hard pressed to say which is better than the
other. I hope that the Academy chooses one of the two, and will be
most chagrined if they duck the choice and go with one of the other
nominations. Even if neither film is chosen, I’m grateful
that, at this moment in our history, we have films that remind us
where we have been, what our challenges have been, and that the
struggle, indeed, continues.
This
year’s Academy Award nominations give African Americans much to
celebrate, and these nominations are also reminders that momentary
visibility is not the same thing as structural change. How many
African Americans can actually green-light a movie? How many
compelling stories, like that depicted in Hidden Figures, will never
be movies because of misconceptions about American audiences and
racial material? When will African American history be viewed as
American history and savored all year instead of only in February?
Kudos to Raoul Peck and Ava DuVernay. Their films make the case that
documentaries about African American life and history can reach broad
audiences.
|