“I think here again we are afraid of individuals, and if you are an individual, you know you're sort of an outcast. It's like having talent today. Talent is no longer an asset to a person. It is now a hindrance because of the vast amount of monies that are being made by people with no talent.”
Read MoreA work of art has to go beyond a placard. Sue Coe’s art not only believes wholeheartedly in what she is saying, she offers us artwork like a sacrificial lamb we’re afraid to touch.
Read MoreFurther connecting the Black and the Green. Both Pryor and Beckett’s writing are littered with death and suicide, sex and yearning, love and memory, and surreal interplays of the imagination and the ominousness of the law. But in both there is a marvelous hold on life that is both positive and negative, optimistic as it is pessimistic, funny as it is sad.
Read MoreSamuel Beckett and Richard Pryor: How their tragicomedy Saves and Enlightens us.
Read MoreIn their latest cut-up, Dennis Leroy Kangalee and Maxx Pinkins have a critical conversation on this classic indie film
Read MoreMeditations on Russia, Paul Robeson, the morality of a camera, and the embryo of a wobbly cinema.
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 MoreWe’ve lost three solid brothers and friends to The Luminal
Read MoreToo often for Black performers the real elephant in the room is one's relationship to the camera. Until the mainstream critics like Scott and Hoberman and Dargis at the NY Times cease using their self-satisfied knowledge about historical racism in Hollywood, how “difficult” things are for Blacks, etc – we must consistently inject our point-of-view into the ether. We are not invisible. Our perceptions are just constantly marginalized.
Read MorePublic Toilet Africa expresses this angst and frustration of 21st century capitalism, and shows that the entire world has taken a piece of Africa and similarly shat upon it.
Read MoreCharles Burnett, Ben Caldwell, Alile Sharon Larkin have a intergenerational conversation with audiences at the first-ever Thuh Juneteenth Film Festival
Read MoreWith The Spook Who Sat by the Door, Dixon could pick up where he left off with the remarkable creative caliber of Duff in Nothing But a Man, but now as a director…and his, and screenwriter Sam Greenlee’s, greatest achievement.
Read MoreJacinto Taras Riddick and Che Ayende have partnered to give us not only the best collaboration in cinema of the past year, but a shocking example of the concussive force of writing, directing and performing for the screen that I have been waiting to see for a long time. I went into the screening a lapsed filmmaker, and emerged with my faith restored.
Read MoreThe actor, by nature, is the most political of all artists because he is literally using his body as an instrument to engage in our accepted or disregarded mores, injustices, dreams, longings, etc. The actor marries double consciousness seamlessly – the past and the present - in order to leave the audience with a potential future…he is a shaman, and we rely on him to heal the tribe or at least tell us what ails us. THIS is Ivan Dixon.
Read MoreIt is immoral to utilize “beautiful and seductive” photography for a film that is couched in shame and regret and unconscionable acts. Tumors are not beautiful and to deny their ugliness and terror is to deny the affliction.
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