Showing posts with label Sidney Poitier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sidney Poitier. Show all posts

5/27/2017

Get Out (2017) and I am Not Your Negro (2017)

Get Out is a new film by Jordan Peele, who has done comedy in the past (I'm not familiar with his work, though). This movie has been getting alot of buzz and is hailed a modern day horror classic. I've totally been into the modern horror revolution, having enjoyed The Guest and It Follows most of all lately. Get Out isn't so much a slasher film but there are some violent parts, it's more a psychological thriller focusing on a young interracial couple (the man is black and the woman is white).  The white woman wants to introduce her beau to the fam, who turns out to be cultish and I had flashbacks to when I got involved in a cult-like group. I won't get into all those details but let me just say I'm really sensitive to the kinds of stories that involve cults. I still haven't seen The Master because I feel I'm not ready to handle it. The film is also a commentary on race; one of my favorite lines in the movie is when the young man (I forgot the actor's name) calls his friend and says "these people missed the movement". It's a freakish film and really well-done; the cult aspect of the film definitely got me unnerved.

I Am Not Your Negro is an engrossing documentary on James Baldwin, brilliant writer and activist who unfortunately died too soon - in the mid 1980s. The film is combination of his television interviews (with Dick Cavett and others), historical footage, and movie clips (including some Sidney Poitier and Doris Day movies that contrast the white and black experience on film during this period) from the 1960s through the 1970s. There is narration by Samuel L. Jackson, who reads the words of an unfinished manuscript by Baldwin. All of the compiled interview clips are definite highlights. Baldwin is very candid and honest about the real attitudes black Americans of the time, and how for example the media and Hollywood were not accurate depictions of real life. In one segment, the film The Defiant Ones is analyzed, and Baldwin talks about how he and others felt that in real life, the black fugitive would have and should have escaped and fended for himself but instead he's shown befriending and helping the other white fugitive. It made me think about that film in another light.



The film also shows clips of 1960s demonstrations and interviews that included hollywood celebrities like Marlon Brando, Harry Belafonte and Charlton Heston. Heston is usually dismissed as a racist and right-wing nut and in his later years because his rapid gun activism didn't win him universal favor. His early involvement with civil rights movement is typically forgotten. In Heston's biography I
n the Arena he talks about his involvement in the Civil Rights movement in the '60s, and then talks about what happened once he became president of the Screen Actors Guild. Martin Luther King Jr met with him to ask him about the lack of people of color in the union and in technical fields in general. Heston explained how he felt he couldn't do much of anything. Dr. King then met with members of other film unions and eventually persuaded them to allow people of color; there had been an rule in place where only children of the members of SAG could be admitted to technical unions.

In August of 1963 King lead a March on Washington which welcomed delegates from Hollywood. Heston was one of those who came and who gave a presentation; in the book, he mentions that his statement to the press was written by James Baldwin (Heston calls him "Jimmy" in the book and describes him as if the reader knows nothing about him). Heston was upset because he wanted to write his own speech, but ultimately praised Baldwin for his writing skill.

After seeing this I Am Not Your Negro, I wanted to read more of  Baldwin's work, and have begun to read Giovanni's Room, The Fire Next Time, and Go Tell It On the Mountain, which deals with religion. It's so fascinating to me that Baldwin had an early interest and exposure to churches and gospel music, which he often writes about, reflecting on the spiritual lives of people in society. I wonder what he might think of the film Get Out, which delves into the manipulation of the mind. And often what he would say about today's cultural landscape? His voice lives on and speaks to us today. The documentary feels so contemporary. Read Bobby Rivers' post on both of these films,

7/22/2016

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967)

Hepburn and Tracy are liberal white parents whose attitudes and beliefs are tested when their daughter announces she's marrying a black physician (Sidney Poitier).

It's an important film of its time.

Tracey died within days of completing his part and Hepburn won her third Oscar for her performance.

This was Poitier's year: He also starred in 1967's Best Picture Winner "In the Heat of the Night".

11/13/2010

Top 10 Box Office Stars of 1969 (USA)


The rankings come from Quigley Publishing Co.'s annual list (since 1932) of top money making stars in the USA, which based on a poll of hundreds of theater executives. The list does not rank stars only on how much cash their films made, but on what theater owners say about who attracts audiences on their star power alone.

1. Paul Newman

2. John Wayne


3. Steve McQueen


4. Dustin Hoffman



5. Clint Eastwood


6. Sidney Poitier



7. Lee Marvin


8. Jack Lemmon

9. Katherine Hepburn


10. Barbra Streisand


9/18/2010

No Way Out (1950) with Sidney Poitier

No Way Out is a really great, underrated film from 1950. It features the film debut of Sidney Poitier, who plays a young doctor who has to treat Richard Widmark's racist character. I think it was ahead of its time in tackling race and racism on screen; few other movies in this same period were touching the subject. There are quite a few uses of the N word, also surprising to hear back in 1950 in movies. 

Sidney playing a doctor in his first film is something truly groundbreaking.  The movie, even though it is a bit dated, is still watchable today, and holds up better than many films of the same era. 

Also starring Linda Darnell. Available on DVD/Netflix.


8/23/2009

A Patch of Blue (1965)

This film is memorable for being one of the first films to tackle the subject of interracial couples (Sidney Poitier and Elizabeth Hartman). 

A touching element of the story is that Hartman is blind, and loves Sidney regardless of the color of his skin.

Shelley Winters plays her racist mother. She's so mean in this film that I didn't like her for a long time. Not until I saw her in The Diary of Anne Frank and The Poseidon Adventure. 

The performances are brilliant, as is the direction. I also enjoy the location shots on real city streets and in a real grocery store where you can see how low prices were back then. 

It is also a film that I think many can relate to, even in our modern times, because the characters are so familiar to real people that we likely know or have heard about. 

Every time I re-watch this movie, it just keeps getting better and better, and is one of those movies that really holds up well after so many years.