Trai Byers |
I went in to see Selma yesterday prepared to find an
angry polemic, and defensive over what director Ava DuVernay and others involved
allegedly did to LBJ’s reputation.
Instead, I found him portrayed as a man who had a grasp of the bigger
picture. For black Americans there can
be no greater issue than injustice based on white racism. For LBJ, I expect that the world was framed
on the basis of political expediency.
And for that reason, watching him resist the pleas of MLK to act to
protect black lives and black rights didn’t make him a monster in my
eyes. It made him a believable
historical figure. What makes him look
(relatively) bad is that the story is told from a black perspective – and Lord
knows it’s high time the story of Civil Rights is told without white heroes who
save the day in the end becoming the centerpiece of the story. LBJ’s legacy is intact.
Just wanted to get
that out of the way at the start.
This is one of those
times when dwelling on the imperfections of a movie feels unworthy. The
imperfections here come from an artist's choice of what to film and what to
leave out. Left out are the realistic depictions of blood and guts and
snot, although there is plenty of violence, because to leave that out would be
not to tell the story at all. And what comes through with powerful
clarity is the dignity of MLK and the Movement.
Getting David Oyelowo to play Martin Luther King was a superb choice. Just brilliant. And I want to say that without slighting the
performances of virtually all the rest of the main characters.
Selma is an American way of telling history – through highly stylized drama,
with good guys and bad guys. There’s
plenty of that in Selma, and in one
case – the J. Edgar Hoover character – they went way over the line by making
him half clown/half zombie. Usually
one feels the need to criticize this black-and-white American habit. But in this story I left the
theatre trying to brush from my clothes the ugliness of white people
carrying Dixie flags and shouting abuse at dignified ladies with their church
hats on walking steely-faced and determined, not knowing whether they
were going to be tossed off the bridge into the water or mowed down by
horses. Sometimes the bad guys simply
are bad guys and coming up with Hitler-built-the-autobahn rationalizations does a
disservice to honest story-telling. The
physical discomfort one feels at the thought that Americans had to endure that kind of
abuse in the lifetime of many of us stays with you.
I woke up today, the morning after, with a feeling of panic, imagining myself in their shoes.
There are certain films I find myself wishing I could make required viewing for
all the schools in America. Milk is one. So is the TV serial, The Wire. And Selma is another.
The story is tight. The pacing feels
just right. The tone is lofty (that’s
how the dignity comes through). The
scene where MLK and Coretta face his infidelities brought tears to the eyes, so
effectively had I been made to care for these characters by this time. There is a sense of excitement as you spot
Andrew Young and John Lewis, Ralph Abernathy, Bayard Rustin, the Rev. Hosea
Williams and other players in the film and in real life you’ve come to know
from these times.
Another powerful emotion wells up as you watch this film, and that’s the
realization that this tale of an historical moment, the sacrifices made to
attain voting rights for blacks in the south, is being told in a modern
context in which today’s conservative forces are still at it, still trying to
remove the rights forced from the hands of LBJ in the 1960s. It brings to the film an immediacy you don’t get from every historical drama.
Selma is a well-told
tale. History come alive. I’m concerned that black people will stay
away because they think they know the story already and white people will stay
away because they don’t want any more bad news.
I went to see it with a friend at
the AMC Metreon, the giant theatre complex at 4th and Mission yesterday with
seats for hundreds. There were only five
or six of us in the place. It was 2:40
in the afternoon on a weekday, of course, but still…
That would be a mistake. Selma is a must-see.
And for a review that says what I think better than I just have, try this one:
Picture Credit: Trai Byers. He's only a minor character in the film, but I include him here because he's so damned good-looking.
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