Culture Steve McQueen on How Directors Shouldn’t Be A***holes and Why “I Have to Get the F*** on With It” as a Black Filmmaker - In a talk before opening the London fest, the Oscar winner spoke about love, the "deafening silence" on slavery before '12 Years a Slave' (and meeting Prince during that Oscar weekend): "If Obama was not the president, that film would not have been made."

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By Georg Szalai
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Steve McQueen

Oscar- and BAFTA Award-winning British writer and director Steve McQueen (12 Years a Slave, Hunger, Shame, Small Axe, Uprising, Occupied City) got a huge applause in honor of his birthday on Wednesday during a BFI London Film Festival event.

He spoke during a “Screen Talk” Wednesday afternoon and press conference ahead of the world premiere of his new movie Blitz — starring Saoirse Ronan, Stephen Graham, Elliot Heffernan and Benjamin Clementine — which is the opening film of the 68th edition of the London fest (LFF).

The movie, McQueen’s third LFF opening film, follows 9-year-old George (Heffernan) in wartime London after his mother Rita (Ronan) sends him as an evacuee to safety in the English countryside. Defiant and determined to get back home on his own to his mother and grandfather Gerald (Paul Weller) in East London, George encounters real danger as a distraught Rita tries to find her footloose son.

McQueen said during the press conference that love is a key theme of Blitz. “I am interested in how, through these particular times, love can shine,” he said. “That is the only thing that matters.” During the Screen Talk, he also said the experience was about “love, L-O-V-E.”

Blitz will be released in the U.S. and U.K. on Nov. 1 before becoming available to stream on Apple TV+ Nov. 22.

During his Screen Talk, McQueen shared that Blitz “surrounded my childhood” as a “silent history around us” as he grew up in London. Even though he now lives in Amsterdam, he said he will always be a Londoner and is just a quick flight away from the British capital.

The filmmaker was also questioned about his past films. About Hunger, he said: “I just thought it would be my first film and my last film.” He added: “I was interested in ritual,” or “the spaces in between the world history books” that make a difference to people. “I love this idea of ritual.”

Filmmakers also shouldn’t be horrible to others, he stressed. Being a director “is not about being an arsehole, but about listening,” McQueen said, adding that there are “too many” of the former. Calling actors “highly” intense and sensitive individuals, he said his goal is always to allow a creative team to arrive at a joint effort in the here and now.

After the success of Hunger, he shared how he met some folks in Hollywood who expected him to be white. How did he decide to make a movie about slavery? “There was this deafening silence,” McQueen shared. “It was kind of apparent. It was almost like I had to say this happened here.” And it had to be a Hollywood film: “It had to be an American, because you want to serve it back” and say this is your U.S. history, the filmmaker shared.

12 Years a Slave made him the first Black director to win the best picture Oscar. How was that night? “I met Prince,” McQueen shared during his Screen Talk. “That was great!”

Otherwise, he said about the experience: “It was heavy.” And he argued: “If President Obama was not the president, that film would not have been made.” A lot of Black filmmakers got to make their films because “it was a blockbuster,” he added but noted that the following year there was not a single Black nomination.

After a dance scene from Small Axe was screened, McQueen said it was very emotional for him and others in the Black community who would “get beaten” by police officers and others when they were younger. “If there weren’t these blues parties in the ’60s, ’70s, ’80s, there would be a huge epidemic of mental health,” or a bigger one, he said.

Discussing his approach to filmmaking and how his personal history affects it some more, McQueen said that as a Black man, he didn’t have any privilege, and therefore was focused on going ahead with his work. “I have to get the fuck on with it” and don’t have the privilege of thinking about certain things others may, he said. Asked for advice, he later also told an audience member to stay focused on the work: “Keep going on!”
 
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the "deafening silence" on slavery before '12 Years a Slave'
What kind of retard shit is this? "Muh slavery" has been a center point of american schooling for decades
(and meeting Prince during that Oscar weekend):
Prince hated niggers
"If Obama was not the president, that film would not have been made."
That doesn't even make sense, Obama wasn't black

How accurate to actual history is 12 years a slave?
Well the slave is black and the slaver was white, so basically completely inaccurate to history
 
This guy’s proud of being black but Blitz features a white woman who had a kid with a nigger in 1930’s Britain. Black mass migration to the UK didn’t start until the late 40’s.
I don’t care whether this film is good or not, I won’t pay to see mudsharking promoted in cinema.
 
I don’t care whether this film is good or not, I won’t pay to see mudsharking promoted in cinema.
It seems like it was well-received by """critics""" and nobody bothered to see it. I'll have to pirate it since yet again, it has no DVD release and I'm not paying for some gay streaming service.
 
After the success of Hunger, he shared how he met some folks in Hollywood who expected him to be white. How did he decide to make a movie about slavery? “There was this deafening silence,” McQueen shared. “It was kind of apparent. It was almost like I had to say this happened here.” And it had to be a Hollywood film: “It had to be an American, because you want to serve it back” and say this is your U.S. history, the filmmaker shared.

Didn’t Django Unchained come out the year prior?
 
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It seems like it was well-received by """critics""" and nobody bothered to see it. I'll have to pirate it since yet again, it has no DVD release and I'm not paying for some gay streaming service.
Nigger misery porn cinema really is something. When you watch Wakaliwood movies like ‘Who Killed Captain Alex’ you can’t help but be swept up by the enthusiasm, energy and sheer determination to make a fun movie for the price of a Big Mac.
Then you get coons like McQueen and Spike Lee, whose lives are magnitudes better than the average West African’s by dint of their access to white people and white culture, and what do they make? Movies about how white people are cunts, but every black man deserves a white woman.
That, or fanciful nonsense rewriting history like The Woman King.
 
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Nigger misery porn cinema really is something. When you watch Wakaliwood movies like ‘Who Killed Captain Alex’ you can’t help but be swept up by the enthusiasm, energy and sheer determination to make a fun movie for the price of a Big Mac.
Then you get coons like McQueen and Spike Lee, whose lives are magnitudes better than the average West African’s by dint of their access to white people and white culture, and what do they make? Movies about how white people are cunts, but every black man deserves a white woman.
That, or fanciful nonsense rewriting history like The Woman King.
I'm only watching 'Blitz' because of Sersh and I would much much prefer it be a Wakaliwood action thriller than a McQueen film.
 
I know this thread was brought back from the dead, but for the curious:


Having read the book (12 Years a Slave, not the linked book), I definitely believe it's a bunch of bullshit. The book begins with a free black man getting kidnapped out of the DC area and trafficked through an underground river network to the south to be a slave.

Because that's completely feasible and economic.

I don't think Northup or any of the slave owners have been proven to actually exist either.
 
I'm only watching 'Blitz' because of Sersh and I would much much prefer it be a Wakaliwood action thriller than a McQueen film.
She’s never particularly impressed me as an actress, and now she’s signed on to do a revisionist mudsharking movie she’s off my ‘to watch’ list forever.
 
Most of the slavery was done by Jews. From the captains of the slave ships the companies that sold the slaves and the slave owners in the American southern states. It was mostly Jews.
 
Isn't it frowned upon to have your professional name in Hollywood be exactly the same as another famous person's? Like if you were to become an actor today and your name was Ryan Reynolds, you probably couldn't get away with that as your "stage name" because there's already a famous Ryan Reynolds out there. You'd have to be Ryan B. Reynolds or something.

Why does this nig get to use the exact same name as one of the most famous Hollywood actors ever? Yeah I'm Clint Eastwood. No not that one, a different Clint Eastwood

Fuck you
 
I know he doesn't look it, but knowing that just about the only things the last three generations of Americans have come out of public school knowing about their history is:
-George Washington
-Slavery
-Killin' Nazis

And this guy saying there was some "deafening silence" around the subject, Is enough for me to call call McQueen Bri'ish.
 
After the success of Hunger, he shared how he met some folks in Hollywood who expected him to be white. How did he decide to make a movie about slavery? “There was this deafening silence,” McQueen shared. “It was kind of apparent. It was almost like I had to say this happened here.” And it had to be a Hollywood film: “It had to be an American, because you want to serve it back” and say this is your U.S. history, the filmmaker shared.
A yes the deafening silence of slavery 170 years afterwards. Almost like we are trying to move on? How gracious of this nigger to come to our rescue and remind us of it.
 
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