Posted on 07/08/2018 12:57:32 PM PDT by EdnaMode
Hollywood tends to pack summer with escapist flicks popcorn movies that have little to do with the real world, unless you consider rampaging dinosaurs a pressing societal problem.
But these five socially-conscious films are sneaking into cinemas, and each has something compelling to say.
Sorry To Bother You This surrealistic comedy starring Lakeith Stanfield (Get Out) and Tessa Thompson (Creed) is earning rave reviews for wicked social satire that touches on race, class and capitalism.
Stanfield plays Cassius Green, a telemarketer in Oakland whose career takes off once he adopts a white telephone voice with customers.
Reviewer Kam Williams of kamwilliams.com called the film a thought-provoking social satire marking the scriptwriting and directorial debut of Boots Riley.
While the movie may not be for everyone because of its far-left leanings, Williams says its entertaining enough to recommend even to members of the 1%. The film opens July 6.
Blindspotting The dramedy is likewise set in Oakland and takes on similarly timely themes, but with a more dramatic tone. Real-life childhood friends Daveed Diggs and Rafael Casal co-wrote, co-produced and co-star in the film, with a gentrifying Bay Area serving as the backdrop to the action.
Diggs plays a man on probation who desperately tries to steer clear of trouble, but finds his future jeopardized when he witnesses a white cop shoot a fleeing black man.
That all-too-realistic scenario gives Blindspotting its bite. The film, set to open July 20, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January, where it received an enthusiastic reception. It also picked up a Directors to Watch award at this years Palm Springs International Film Festival.
Far From the Tree Also opening July 20, is the documentary Far From the Tree. Directed by Rachel Dretzin, it explores families where the apple fell far from the tree in other words, situations where children differ significantly from their parents because of autism, Down Syndrome, dwarfism, transgenderism or other characteristics.
I describe the documentary as a film that turns your assumptions about difference on their head and makes you realize just how many walls we all put up to people that look and act, behave differently, Dretzin told Urban Hollywood 411. Its a film about one of the few places in the world where you cant actually avoid people who are different from you, which is your family.
Based on the book by the same name from Andrew Solomon, Dretzin says the documentary speaks directly to our times.
At this moment, for a couple of reasons, its a particularly urgent message, she noted. One obviously being our political climate in which difference seems to be reason for people turning away from each other and building walls and silos and all sorts of things to keep ourselves away from those that are different.
Science also plays a role in the film.
Genetic testing and science is advancing at such a rapid pace that we will pretty soon be able to eliminate some of these conditions if we want to, Dretzin added. I think the book and the film are really a cry against that and for that kind of beautiful diversity.
Night Comes On Jordana Spiro makes her feature directorial debut with the critically-acclaimed Night Comes On, opening on August 3.
Described as a female revenge drama, the film revolves around Angel LaMere (played by Dominique Fishback), who after her release from juvenile hall goes on a mission to settle scores with her father. Along for the journey is Angels younger sister, Abby (newcomer Tatum Marilyn Hall).
The harshness of the outside world to the recently incarcerated, for whom life has stalled while everything around them has moved on, is a well-scuffed starting point in cinema, critic Guy Lodge said in his review for Variety. Its rarely a story that has been filtered through a black female gaze, however, and Night Comes On subtly but pointedly differentiates its perspective early on.
BlacKkKlansman Questions of racism and entrenched white supremacy pervade Spike Lees BlacKkKlansman.
The directors latest joint is based on the true story of an African-American detective in the 1970s who infiltrated a local chapter of the Ku Klux Klan in Colorado.
This film to me is a wake-up call, Lee said at the Cannes Film Festival in May, where the movie made its world premiere. I know in my heart I dont care what the critics say or anybody else we are on the right side of history with this film.
BlacKkKlansman was awarded the Grand Prize at Cannes.
It will arrive in theaters on August 10, to coincide with the one-year anniversary of the white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia that left a counter-protester dead.
Ping to #40
Firstly, it looks to me like the black man did not infiltrate the KKK. The sources in #40 seem to say that he got a white man to do it for him.
Secondly, I didn’t see an estimate of how many KKK people there were in CO. I’m pretty sure David Duke was near the east coast somewhere. For all I know he sent one guy to CO to try and recruit.
The KKK was big in OK in the early 20th century, but by the 1960s was defunct. I don’t see any reason to suspect any significant KKK activity in CO in the second half of the century.
Actually, the more I think about it, the more I want to say that this man was outright lying when he said he “infiltrated” the KKK. He messed with a few racists in a rather adolescent way, that’s all.
He professes that at least one of the KKK members he identified was a commissioned officer stationed at NORAD.
“He professes that at least one of the KKK members he identified was a commissioned officer stationed at NORAD.”
Okay, that’s a bridge too far. No way a KKK member gets the clearances an officer had to have to work at NORAD.
Not even remotely plausible, sorry.
If you want to get even more skeptical, they were apparently two of them. And they had access to nuclear launch triggers: https://www.deseretnews.com/article/635175667/Black-sergeant-was-loyal-Klansman.html
(He calls the Klan investigation “one of the most significant investigations I was ever involved in because of the scope and the magnitude of how it unfolded.”
The investigation revealed that Klan members were in the military, including two at NORAD who controlled the triggers for nuclear weapons.
“I was told they were being reassigned to somewhere like the North Pole or Greenland,” Stallworth said.)
“And they had access to nuclear launch triggers”
That statement betrays a lack of knowledge of how these things work. Makes it sound like one man could waltz in, pull a “trigger,” and launch.
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