A Belated Happy New
Year to all Real Deal
readers! We wish for each of you a healthy and prosperous 2013. We had an
enjoyable holiday that included a few days in Washington DC to visit family and
friends, time spent catching up on some long-intended reading, and working on
plans to improve and expand our work under this banner.
We start our new year
with a large shout out to film director Quentin Tarantino for his immensely
important and entertaining Django
Unchained. If you haven’t seen it
yet, put it on your list of must-do items.
You have probably
already received varying opinions on this film. Negative comments focus on
claims of excessive use of the “N” word, the inappropriate juxtaposition of
humor in treating the dead serious subject of slavery, Tarantino’s trademark
gratuitous over-the-top violence, the super-Tom role played by Samuel L.
Jackson, and even the lament that the story should have been told by an African
American.
To all of that I say
“Balderdash”.
Django is a
path-breaking, highly entertaining film of great cultural significance. Mild
spoiler alert: the black guy takes on racist evil and emerges victorious in a
noble cause pretty much single-handedly. This is pretty much a Hollywood first,
and likely a whole lot more significant than, say, the first cinematic
interracial kiss.
The blood and gore,
while brutal, are appropriate to the context of the story. Slavery was a brutal
institution: black life was cheap, slaves were property pretty much akin to
scrap that, at an owner’s whim, could be maimed or killed for pretty much any
or no reason, including for entertainment.
I absolutely loved
Samuel L. Jackson’s incredible work as Stephen, the contemptible HNIC*. It is entirely possible to admire the
man’s craft while despising the character he portrays.
But here’s the real
deal: Django is a movie that keeps on
giving long after you’ve seen it. [My wife and I went to the late show on
Christmas night.] I rejoice that so many people are discussing it with such
intensity.
Almost four years ago,
in February 2009, US Attorney
General Eric Holder correctly called out Americans as a “nation of cowards”
on the issue of race. He said Americans urgently needed to start confronting
the issue of race relations before the country became even further polarized.
Django’s power makes
it an excellent vehicle for entering that dialogue. Most of us know by now that
black people are no more monolithic than any other ethnic group. I say it’s a
good thing that spirited debate has erupted over the movie. It’s called the
marketplace of ideas or something.
The only way black
people are going to shed some of our retrograde notions is by airing them out
and having them defeated by healthier ones.
Unlike most Hollywood
movies that feature an abundance of powerful black actors portraying strong
black people, this movie is likely to attract more white viewers than black
ones. Now that latter group is certainly one that could use some healthy
discussion of race, especially if it is at least partially framed around a
historic reference to the nation’s bestiality.
* If
you don’t know the meaning of the term, ask an African American colleague or
friend [the older the better], or email me.
2 comments:
Well stated!
Man this is a great analysis...I have already seen the movie three times and may watch again this evening
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