New Yorker Radio Hour -- Ava DuVernay in Conversation with Jelani Cobb

'No film adaptation of A Wrinkle In Time, Madeleine L’Engle’s beloved, and often banned, children’s book, published in 1962, has ever made it to American movie theaters. It finally comes to the screen with a cast that includes Oprah Winfrey and Reese Witherspoon. The director is Ava DuVernay, who wasn’t the obvious choice for a metaphysical fantasy epic. Best known for Selma, about the 1965 civil-rights march, DuVernay also made the documentary 13, about the prison system, and the TV series Queen Sugar. But DuVernay tells New Yorker staff writer Jelani Cobb that she relished the opportunity to create a fantasy film. “You’re seeing worlds built through the point of view of a black woman from Compton,” she says. “So when I’m told, ‘Create a planet,’ my planet’s going to look different from my white male counterpart’s planet”—which is what Hollywood shows us “ninety-seven per cent of the time.”'
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Published on February 16, 2018 20:03
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