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To: lewisglad

I think Debbie is going off the deep end - its fatal attraction rip off by the white writer of Star Trek 5 (the really bad one) that uses a black actor and actress as the husband and wife.

The twist is not so much racial its that instead of the lesson of fatal attraction - that men shouldn’t stray -its that when men stray the wife has to fight for her man.

This review expresses it better than I did

http://www.moviejungle.com/headlines/templates/templatemjnews3.aspx?articleid=2144&zoneid=1


33 posted on 04/26/2009 4:24:16 PM PDT by gondramB
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To: gondramB
If you don't think it's racial, go watch the movie with a mostly black audience. I dare you. Maybe you won't think it's racial, but I guarantee you that a lot of folks in the theater will. Having occasionally seen similar films with raucous black audiences myself, Miss Schlussel's description rings very true...

I live in a mostly Black suburb of Detroit, and I saw the movie in a local theater with an entirely Black audience. I heard all assortment of racist comments about the White people and the White chick stalker, throughout the movie and afterward as I left.
34 posted on 04/26/2009 4:34:17 PM PDT by irishjuggler
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To: gondramB
Please. Imagine if the opposite had been the focus of the film; a white couple with a black female stalker.
37 posted on 04/26/2009 4:43:54 PM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: gondramB

Yes, ‘Obsessed’ is the Most Significant Film of the Decade
By John Ridley

In some other, alt Spock-with-a-beard universe, the new movie “Obsessed” would be as little as its producers wish it to be: an elongated, filmed catfight targeted toward young men who’ll willing hand over their hard earned pay in hopes of witnessing the female leads rip each others’ shirts off.

But we don’t live in an alt universe. We live in our universe. And in our universe, “Obsessed” is the most significant film of the decade.

It stars Idris Elba whose secretary, Ali Larter, overreacts to some mild on-the-job flirtation, and things escalate from there between Larter and Elba’s wife played by Beyoncé Knowles. A perfectly fine little bit of been there/done that “crazy woman goes crazy for some other woman’s man” programmer.

“Fatal Attraction” and “Play Misty for Me.”

But by accident or design — I’m guessing accident – “Obsessed” carries the most social-political wallop entertainment’s had to offer since the Obama and Clinton stand-ins got into a tussle on WWE.

First, Elba and Knowles play a middle-class, happy-but-bored married couple who are feeling the stress of raising their first child ... And they just happen to be black.

What?

How’d all that get past the fake liberal studio execs who rarely if ever portray middle-class black families in lead roles in films?

And the black man’s got a white person working for him. And she’s a she. And she’s hot for the black man, all of which is a flip on a grip of social fears that have been pervasive on film going back to “Birth of a Nation.”

And to protect her family, the black wife of the black man — SPOILER ALERT … unless you’ve seen the trailer — kicks the crazy white woman’s pale backside. That makes the film the biggest black woman’s wish fulfillment revenge fantasy that doesn’t star Tyler Perry in drag ever!

And while the text of the movie is clear, it’s the subtext that is even more powerful. I can’t help but read Elba as President Obama, Larter as a crazy tea-bagger and Knowles as Michelle Obama come around with those cut guns she’s always sporting ready to dump that tea-bagging you-know-what back in Boston Harbor.

I’m sorry, but “Obsessed” is a movie that challenges. Ironically, more so than the other major film it opens against: “The Soloist.”

Despite the considerable talents of the its two leads - Jamie Foxx and Robert Downey, Jr. — that film looks like the umpteenth telling of the liberal white (although in real life the character he portrays was Hispanic, Downey Jr. has proven he can play any ethnicity) whose life is changed by yet another version of the “magical black man.”

Far too saccharine and on-the-nose for me. I’ll take social commentary wrapped in the artifice of sexy salt-and-pepper, girl-on-girl action any day.

http://www.thewrap.com/blog-entry/2659


38 posted on 04/26/2009 4:44:50 PM PDT by lewisglad
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To: gondramB
The twist is not so much racial its that instead of the lesson of fatal attraction - that men shouldn’t stray -its that when men stray the wife has to fight for her man.

************************

From the article:

"Although the husband never gives in to the White chick's pursuits, she frames him up to make it look as if he did, and he's in the doghouse with his wife."

39 posted on 04/26/2009 4:45:45 PM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: gondramB

I like that review, the gist of which is that it wasn’t so much about Stupid White People vs. African Americans but rather everybody in the movie is dumb and/or deficient EXCEPT Beyonce (PBH).

Everybody has to tone down their performance so as not to upstage the Big She.


63 posted on 04/26/2009 9:45:38 PM PDT by sinanju
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