Culture Why I won't be watching The Butler and 12 Years a Slave - As a black person, I can honestly say I am exhausted and bored with these kinds of 'dramatic race' films

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By Orville Lloyd Douglas
Forest-Whitaker-in-The-Bu-010.jpg
Forest Whitaker in The Butler

Lee Daniel's new film The Butler is a box office success, already generating Oscar buzz, but I am not interested in seeing it. I'm also skipping British filmmaker Steve McQueen's 12 Years a Slave, another movie about black people dealing with slavery.

I'm convinced these black race films are created for a white, liberal film audience to engender white guilt and make them feel bad about themselves. Regardless of your race, these films are unlikely to teach you anything you don't already know. Frankly, why can't black people get over slavery? Or, at least, why doesn't anyone want to see more contemporary portrayals of black lives?

The narrow range of films about the black life experience being produced by Hollywood is actually dangerous because it limits the imagination, it doesn't allow real progress to take place. Yet, sadly, these roles are some of the only ones open to black talent. People want us to cheer that black actors from The Butler and 12 Years a Slave are likely to be up for best actor and actress awards, yet it feels like a throwback, almost to the Gone with the Wind era.

I am not against revisiting the past, but there are already numerous black films that have covered the civil rights era and slavery. The quandary with black movies is they are overly fixated on the past, only depicting black suffering in relation to race, which is bizarre and peculiar.

Can a black film be created about black people not focusing on race? Is race the only central conflict the lives of people of colour?

I don't know about other black people, but I don't sit around all day thinking only about the fact I am black. I think about the problems in my life: the struggles, the joys, the happiness, most of which don't involve the issue of race. As a black person, I can honestly say I am exhausted and bored with these kinds of "dramatic race" films.

I might have to turn in my black card, because I don't care much about slavery.

I've already watched the television series Roots, which I feel covered the subject matter extremely well. Of course, I understand slavery is an important part of any black person's history, but dwelling on slavery is pathetic. It ended in North America over 100 years ago, yet since Django Unchained made over $400m last year, more slavery movies emerge.

These movies present a false narrative that life is so much better for black people now. It is true that progress has indeed taken place. Black people don't have to sit at the back of the bus and are no longer slaves. However, there are so many stories that need to be told about the black life experience beyond two specific eras in black history.

Another film I won't be seeing in the fall is the biopic about Nelson Mandela starring Idris Elba. How many biopics can be made about Nelson Mandela and the Apartheid era in South Africa? Honestly, I have lost count. I'm not saying there aren't reasons to celebrate Mandela, but surely having just about every black actor of note play him isn't the way to do it.

Another problem with these race movies is they also focus exclusively on the lives of black heterosexuals. The vast majority of Hollywood movies released are about straight black folks, not black LGBT people. Why aren't there more movies about the struggle of black gays and lesbians in the western world or in the Caribbean or Africa?

Rodney Evans, a gay African-American filmmaker, does have an indie film out called The Happy Sad about a young black, gay couple. How many people have heard about this film?

I'll celebrate when Hollywood starts telling the stories about people of colour that have yet to be told. Now that would be Oscar worthy.
 
I'm convinced these black race films are created for a white, liberal film audience to engender white guilt and make them feel bad about themselves
Oh so it’s a conspiracy theory when I say it but Unga Bunga can say it without consequences.
The narrow range of films about the black life experience being produced by Hollywood is actually dangerous because it limits the imagination, it doesn't allow real progress to take place
Yes. Exactly.

Who makes the movies again?
 
How about we just focus on cool movies instead of focusing on race? Blade Runner was good.
Because black markets don't give a shit about blade runner. Black people, due to a government that hates them and being insanely retarded, only care about black movies and other black culture products. The idea of black people progressing out of the rut of black culture is a pipe dream at best. Why listen to classical music, be into tech, or read - Or doing anything outside the comfort zone? Niggas are instead demanded to watch obese bitches with bad wigs twerk to retarded niggers mumbling. After that they can buy the next John Madden or NBA vidya game and then complain 24/7 about being victims.
 
Literally Tyler Perry has made a fucking cottage industry of the kind of movie you're asking for.
It just doesn't get any traction in the mainstream because white people only care about expressing their guilt complex when it comes to black movies.
Don't things like BET also make what are essentially the black version of Hallmark movies?

There's been a lot of movies with black actors and shows that aren't about race. A lot of Eddie Murphy funny movies, that Sister Sister and That's So Raven. They've always been there but since they're not going to be nominated for the Oscars (because anything that does is super serious cinema we gotta take seriously guys about DEEP issues) I guess they don't count.
 
Don't things like BET also make what are essentially the black version of Hallmark movies?

There's been a lot of movies with black actors and shows that aren't about race. A lot of Eddie Murphy funny movies, that Sister Sister and That's So Raven. They've always been there but since they're not going to be nominated for the Oscars (because anything that does is super serious cinema we gotta take seriously guys about DEEP issues) I guess they don't count.
There are a fucking ton of black movies, this dude's just upset that the only ones of them that get mainstream acclaim are fodder for white liberals to work out their guilt complex
 
This article is more than 10 years old....
You can tell, because of phrases like
I'm convinced these black race films are created for a white, liberal film audience to engender white guilt and make them feel bad about themselves.

Imagine someone writing that in a mainstream newspaper these days.
 
Are you sure about that?
100%. The feds view blacks in only two ways. 1. Vote Cattle. 2 Sport ball cattle. Sure, a few get to be put as tokens in positions of pseudo-power. Still, the majority of niggers are only kept alive with basics so they can poison their bodies in a never-ending hell of diabetes and retardation to keep those votes coming. Why do anything to improve black communities when you can have one or two tokens take nonstop media attention and use urban education centers as gigantic money laundering centers?
 
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