In their latest cut-up, Dennis Leroy Kangalee and Maxx Pinkins have a critical conversation on this classic indie film
Read MoreOur blog contributor Dennis Leroy Kangalee is joined by fellow screenwriter & actor Maxx Pinkins with a critical conversation of Jordan Peele’s NOPE using the cut up technique
Read MoreCharles Burnett, Ben Caldwell, Alile Sharon Larkin have a intergenerational conversation with audiences at the first-ever Thuh Juneteenth Film Festival
Read MoreWithin the Black tradition of filmmaking, mentorship has always been a necessity. The understanding of the power that images have on the masses, the de facto “one at a time” hiring practices, and the lack of initiative by the studios to fund Black projects paired with their funding of hateful and harmful images - fuels this urgency.
Read MoreGordon Parks being depicted as the "Father" of Blaxploitation Cinema is atrocious lies and makes his work and legacy "easy" and "pat" for movie academics and white kids in the suburbs
Read MoreIn pt 2, Dennis Leroy Kangalee explores Billy Dee Williams’ personal iconography, his search for a director who can channel him correctly, Billy Dee’s psychedelic mind expansions, and, oh yeah, Star Wars.
Read MoreDennis Leroy Kangalee explores how and why actor Billy Dee Williams is our most underrated matinee idol
Read MoreThe indomitable Kaycee Moore stands as a monument to a kind of stoic beauty that many of the characters in her films depend on.
Read MoreA good amount of distribution methods originated from a Black man’s adaptability - a man just trying to do his best despite circumstances that made him feel unwelcome.
Read MoreJuneteenth proves that Black American’s 40 acres and a mule are due
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