Mark Anthony Neal's Blog, page 768
December 28, 2014
Louisville’s Ferguson Moment

Published on December 28, 2014 20:00
ReelBlackTV Interviews Ava DuVernay

Published on December 28, 2014 18:42
Teaching Black Girls Computer Coding

Published on December 28, 2014 18:12
December 26, 2014
ART21: Kerry James Marshall at Prospect.3 Biennial in NOLA

Chicago-based artist Kerry James Marshall travels to the Prospect.3 biennial in New Orleans, Louisiana and speaks with five fellow artists and one collective: Zarouhie Abdalian, William Cordova, Lonnie Holley, Yun-Fei Ji, Christopher Myers, and The Propeller Group. For Marshall, a biennial presents an opportunity to "try out something more experimental." His site-specific installation of futuristic gold plexiglass alcoves in the windows of the Ashé Cultural Arts Center creates "an otherworldly space" that "cuts against the grain of a kind of abjection that people associate with the recovery from [Hurricane] Katrina." Prospect.3 is on view October 25, 2014 through January 25, 2015.
Published on December 26, 2014 07:05
December 25, 2014
Op-Docs: 'No Guns for Christmas'

Based on two police shootings in Ohio, this short documentary questions whether toy guns can really be innocent gifts.
Published on December 25, 2014 18:36
The Illipsis: on Truces, and What Real Peace Requires

In this installment of The Illipsis, Jay Smooth breaks down why it’s vital, both for the community and the cops, that the protests for police reform continue until they’re truly heard.
Published on December 25, 2014 16:45
Ava Duvernay’s Selma: A Bridge Between Past & Present

In the wake of the recently well-publicized killings of black men by police officers, the turbulent relationship between African Americans and the police is a subject of national discussion. Selma historicizes this relationship in offering a mostly unflinching portraiture of the brutality directed at African Americans in the Jim Crow South and the federal government’s desire [as we know even before Lyndon B. Johnson became president] to attempt to stem the unrest rather than legislate aggressive change. Selma will remind some and teach others that the problem of unequal treatment under the law and a pattern of systemic police violence against black people has indeed long been a part of the story of the struggle for freedom and not a recent phenomenon. Selma’s notable too for the able performance of David Oyelowo as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and for daring to imagine the pressure that the great weight of the civil rights struggle exerted on the interior domestic life of Dr. King and wife Coretta Scott King [Carmen Ejogo]. The FBI dogged his every move and J. Edgar Hoover’s infamous tapings, real and manipulated, provided ammunition in trying to undermine the Movement and King.
But the FBI is not the only challenge to King’s marriage and possibly to his leadership in the movement; Selma delicately or rather subtly and bravely – given the still uncomfortable taboo of the discussion within the saintly public shadow of King post his death – alludes to his infidelity and treats Martin and Coretta with some complexity without detracting from or destroying the admirable moral integrity of King’s commitment to the freedom struggle and nonviolence or making him an other worldly deity. He disappoints his wife and is disappointed in himself as the people are in him at turns; he questions, agonizes, and with the companionship and courage of his closest comrades such as Reverend Ralph David Abernathy [Colman Domingo], and the passion of the younger activists like SNCC’s John Lewis, he persists. As Coretta Scott King, Ejogo manages to imbibe the stoic, unfailingly loyal, and dignified public aura of Coretta Scott King and humanize her beyond that narrow dimension. Seeing her conflicted as she reacts to feeling her husband’s agony in a letter he writes to her or as she directs a killer one line response to one of the infamous FBI tapes she receives that is supposed to be of King having sex with another woman. “I know what you sound like’ as King protests the tape’s validity or as she speaks of the ‘fog of death’ that hovers over the family’s life constantly is important in not relegating her to merely being the self-sacrificing, noble wife of the Civil Rights leader. Duvernay avoids sensationalizing those elements of the famous couple’s relationship while going for a rare more nuanced truthful story than previously enabled. King, of course, is ‘the Man’ in the narrative, no doubt about it, but the film confines to the background far too much folk like Diane Nash [Tessa Thompson] – more eye candy than feisty activist – and Bayard Rustin [Reuben Santiago-Hudson], the savvy strategist.
Other key players are merely a catalog of names. At the end of the film, there is a curiously distracting roll call offering notes on the lives of some of the important figures in later years, Andrew Young [André Holland], John Lewis [Stephan James], Sheriff Clark [Stan Houston], Governor Wallace, [Tim Roth], etc., but this highlights some troubling glaring omissions - no footnote for Reverend Abernathy, arguably King’s closet personal friend and comrade in those years or Reverend Hosea Williams [Wendell Pierce] despite his prominence in the Bloody Sunday scene even within the film and his notable work in the years after. Yet, Selma succeeds in staying focused on the intertwining purpose framed by three establishing initial scenes [no spoiler here]: to offer an unflinching representation of the racial violence directed towards African Americans in the Jim Crow south, epitomized on that Bloody Sunday, and to honor the people’s courage in continuing the march in Selma and towards gaining the rights of citizenship in the midst of horrific violence. Throughout the film, the white supremacist brutality enacted on black bodies as well as on people of different races and religious backgrounds who dared to visibly support and participate in the Selma protests and the Movement is painful to watch as it should be and none more so than the rendition of the violent encounter on Edmund Pettus Bridge. Duvernay utilizes a range of long and close shots and slow motion to dramatize the sheer terror inflicted upon the peaceful protesters and the overdue awakening of people across the nation and the world as they witness the bloody rampage on their television sets. Selma has Oprah Winfrey as hopeful Selma voter Annie Lee Cooper on screen and as a producer off screen, Brad Pitt as an executive producer, a largely well-placed ensemble cast, and award buzz. If these factors encourage diverse audiences to go out and see the film, then perhaps it can be more than a glimpse into the past. Selma really isn’t just another good historic movie. It’s a good film that absolutely speaks to right now.
***
Stephane Dunn, PhD, is a writer who directs the Cinema, Television, & Emerging Media Studies program at Morehouse College. She teaches film, creative writing, and literature. She is the author of the 2008 book, Baad Bitches & Sassy Supermamas: Black Power Action Films (U of Illinois Press). Her writings have appeared in Ms., The Chronicle of Higher Education, TheRoot.com, AJC, CNN.com, and Best African American Essays, among others. Her recent work includes the Bronze Lens-Georgia Lottery Lights, Camera Georgia winning short film Fight for Hope and book chapters exploring representation in Tyler Perry's films. Follow her on Twitter: @DrStephaneDunn
Published on December 25, 2014 08:29
December 23, 2014
"Same As It Ever Was (Start Today)" -- Michael Franti & Spearhead

Written By Michael Franti and Stephen "Di Genius" McGregor.
Directed by Michael Franti, Filmed and edited by John Roderick
Graffiti by C4
Published on December 23, 2014 20:43
December 21, 2014
Anthony Hamilton Brings Home Holiday Funk

Once a pop artist has been working long enough, the Christmas album feels like an inevitability. Soul singer Anthony Hamilton wanted to try it out, but he was wary of falling into cliché and repeating the formulas that have shaped holiday records for years.
Published on December 21, 2014 20:13
Fire & Ice: Mount Kenya’s Lost Glaciers

Published on December 21, 2014 19:48
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