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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“It had to be an American, because you want to serve it back” and say this is your U.S. history, the filmmaker shared.
He's English and is Afro-Caribbean, and studied at two prestigious constituents of the University of the Arts, London. While England did have several nasty race riots, I'm not buying he's the best ambassador for this cultural acceptance for Blackness as some kind of hive mind.
 
Obama's legacy as president is already completely shattered, he's going to go down in history as one of the most ineffective and unpopular presidents in american history. the two things he campaigned on were racial unity and socialized healthcare, and he fucked them up so badly that the first race riots in 30 years happened due to his leadership and executive policies, and his socialized healthcare plan was so effective that the entire country has rallied in support around the public execution of an Obamacare CEO in times square

so yeah man if obama had nerver been president, those movies would never have been produced, Here's Why That Would Be A Good Thing;
 
How accurate to actual history is 12 years a slave?
Its a jewish/nigger porno flick about how evil white men are and how niggers are magical and perfect, but also suffer for whites because they are so giving in nature.

Of course as a niggerman, he has it so hard and has to work really hard to get anything. They have to work 3 times as hard as white (they mean jew, but they cannot bite the hand that feeds them).

All this niggers movies are shit, because niggers can only make movies about how much being a nigger means something. Seriously, any nigger making anything will always bring up how being a nigger is somehow something to talk about, and it just degrades to how much they hate whites and how great niggers are. I honestly think indians are above them, as loathsome as they are, at least they can on occasion talk about something other than themselves.
 
His first film was "bear". Bear was a gay film where McQueen wrestled naked with another man. But he is TOTALLY straight. All the mainstream media says so. He also has a wife so its impossible for him to be gay. Absolutely impossible.

He got really famous by making films praising the Irish Republican Army (Hunger) and doing what amounted to a pretentious porno (Shame). He is the ultimate modern asshole director and race grifter.
 
These (rich) motherfuckers would not spit in the direction of an African slave in the hands of a muslim slaver if the poor thing were on fire screaming but will harp on about how people 100+ years removed from slavery in the U.S. don't "take it seriously" despite the fact their family lines usually originate in the late 1800s - early 1900s and were from populations never involved in it.

But it sure is hard being a nigger. Won't you think of the poor niggers.
 
How did he decide to make a movie about slavery? “There was this deafening silence,” McQueen shared.
Nigger, just because we don't talk about something that happened 200 years ago every other second doesn't mean we're in the dark about it. There's a lot more to American history than slavery, you stupid nog.
 

the "deafening silence" on slavery before '12 Years a Slave'​


Cool.

Now talk about the deafening silence on slavery AGAINST:

* Irish
* Scots
* Slavs
* Czech
* Messican
* Indios
* Sand people
* Chinois

No? Why's that? Because ONLY NIGGERZ AND BOONZ experienced (insert thing here). NO ONE FUCKING ELSE. ONLY NIGGERS AND BOONZ.
 
He's English and is Afro-Caribbean, and studied at two prestigious constituents of the University of the Arts, London. While England did have several nasty race riots, I'm not buying he's the best ambassador for this cultural acceptance for Blackness as some kind of hive mind.
His own life experiences show pretty clearly that his outrage is performative - he had advantages at every corner, and enough cash and clout to live comfortably by anyone' s metric, yet swears up and down the weight of the world's racial problems on his shoulder and he'll nobly carry them forth...



Fuck off.
 
His first film was "bear". Bear was a gay film where McQueen wrestled naked with another man. But he is TOTALLY straight. All the mainstream media says so. He also has a wife so its impossible for him to be gay. Absolutely impossible.
You have to see this thing to believe it
 
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.
What actually happened was that a Jewish industry threw open its factories and wallets for you to build anti-white blood libel, because you are black, uppity, and not that bright — a perfect useful idiot, or golem

Libs watch your slavery depression films and confuse them with events they lived through and it makes them think white people are evil, which is why they get made
 

the "deafening silence" on slavery before '12 Years a Slave'​


Cool.

Now talk about the deafening silence on slavery AGAINST:

* Irish
* Scots
* Slavs
* Czech
* Messican
* Indios
* Sand people
* Chinois

No? Why's that? Because ONLY NIGGERZ AND BOONZ experienced (insert thing here). NO ONE FUCKING ELSE. ONLY NIGGERS AND BOONZ.
And they will not mention that part since it doesn't fit with his narrative as well as the narrative of (((TPTB))) and speaking of mention, Thomas Sowell posted a good rant.
 
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