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Depiction of blacks in Hollywood
African Americans in film history
Strategies in films about race
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Recommended: Depiction of blacks in Hollywood
Unlike with films of the LA Rebellion, Blaxploitation offered a portrayal of Black life that was entirely hyperbolic and often fictionalized to pull in Black audiences from poorer areas, who could not afford a television. With the insurgence of television in White American households, the movie theater was deemed a thing of the past. Families stopped going to films on a weekly basis because they had the much smaller and more convenient box at home. This prompted Hollywood to take on a more interesting approach to producing movies. With the introduction of Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song in 1971, an independently produced film about a male prostitute trying to get away from the white police force who accused him of a crime he didn’t commit. …show more content…
The films that followed included Shaft, Superfly (1972), Blacula (1972), Foxy Brown (1974), and many others. These films included soulful R&B soundtracks, likeable caricatures and were cheap enough to make that the studios made a killing off more than twenty films a year. While the Black middle class were ripping apart the stereotypical views of the films, the “Black urban audiences flocked to the cinema to cheer on proud African-American heroes…” (Field 121). Hollywood had found it’s niche, at least for the next five years, and the Blaxploitation boom began. The films made money, and brought out urban audiences, but with what cost, considering the films “merely presents a blackface version of white films” (Martin 45). Many critics argued that the Black heroes of the film asserting power over White people rewrote the script of Black men in Hollywood, who were once only portrayed as over-sexualized jesters who White audiences laughed at. Others stated that Hollywood was simply writing and producing films to create the highest level of appeal, rather than directly trying to denounce Black men and …show more content…
No films with Black actors, in prominent roles, would have existed if it were not for the role of Ousmane Sembene in the realm of Third World cinema, Charles Burnett and his peers from the UCLA Rebellion, and the Blaxploitation boom of the early 1970s. While the subject matter of all of these films differ, there is no greater demonstration of Black-oreinted cinema during the counter-culture age. The UCLA Rebellion’s films marked a change in art house independent features, and was a response to the growing impact of Blaxploitation action and comedy films. With the emergence of this Afro-American subsection of filmmakers creating works that transcended the Hollywood system, artistic and independent cinema began to change form. Films like Spike Lee’s Do The Right Thing (1989) and Cheryl Dunye’s The Watermelon Woman (1996) took from the movement by showcasing the realistic nature of African-Americans without stereotyping their own race. With the LA Rebellion taking a reaction to the production of Blaxploitation films, Hollywood still created more of them, pulling in poorer Black audiences with their incredibly violent and hypersexual material and characters that vividly represented false ideas of Black life. These Blaxploitation films, while not contributing positively to the dialogue of race in media, created jobs for filmmakers and actors of
However, after the dust settled, it was widely accepted that the blacklist was unjust, which enabled many film workers to pursue the movie studios in civil courts through the 1950’s for unpaid contracts and wages (Lewis, 2008). While the studios were initially impacted by the Paramount decision, the breadth of competition and independent successes of smaller studios gave rise to the advancement of innovative filmmaking that may not have been possible if it were not for the Paramount decision. Filmmaking is one of the riskiest and most profitable ventures in modern day society, and without these events, the studios and the film workers may not share the successes that they do
Being one of the few black students to attend Tisch School of the Arts, the aspiring filmmaker’s first year at New York University was a particularly difficult one. Lee’s experiences, race, and upbringing have all led him to create controversial films to provide audiences with an insight into racial issues. Spike Lee’s first student production, The Answer, was a short ten minute film which told of a young black screenwriter who rewrote D.W. Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation. The film was not well accepted among the faculty at New York University, stating Lee had not yet mastered “film grammar.” Lee went on to believe the faculty took offense to his criticisms towards the respected director’s stereotypical portrayals of black characters (1).
Spike Lee is a filmmaker who has generated numerous controversial films that unapologetically bring delicate social issuest o the media forefront. He honestly portrays life's societal obstacles. He challenges the public to cogitate on the world's glitches and disunion. Spike Lee created a name for himself with films such as Do the Right Thing (1989) and Malcolm X (1992), and with documentaries such as 4 Little Girls (1997) and When the Levees Broke (2006). Lee’s goal was to portray African Americans in a more accurate light. Even today Lee still produces films that directly address modern society's most significant historical movements and episodes. His productions analyze themes of race and discrimination. His work can be analyzed in academic studies such as Philosophy, African Studies, and literary concepts. I am interested in Spike Lee because his craft and career choice is somewhat similar to my future career endeavors. He not only exalted his skills to produce films but he broke barriers of stereotypical Hollywood movies. His works address issues in society such as political, racial, and environmental influences on African American culture. Given that society has evolved into a technology dependent culture; using this talent to visibly shed light to these concerns is an ability I hope to obtain one day.
The Blaxploitation movement’s success was partially due to the rise of the civil rights movement, but also due to the financial crisis that was ongoing in Hollywood. In-home television had just hit the markets fully for consumers, therefore there was less of a need or want to go out and see movies as often (Lawrence, 2009). In this paper we will explore Blaxploitation in the form of four different films and the different ways they made an impact on society. These films include: Cotton Comes to Harlem, Shaft, Super Fly and Blacula.
Do the Right Thing is a dramatic comedic film that was directed by Spike Lee. The movie was released in 1989. Lee served in three capacities for the film: writer, director and producer of the movie, Ernest Dickenson was the cinematographer and Barry Alexander Brown was the film’s editor. For this film, Lee garnered together some notable actors and actresses, including Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis, Rosie Perez, Samuel L. Jackson, John Tuturro and Martin Lawrence. The setting of the movie is in Bedford-Stuyvesant; which is a neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York. This particular neighborhood is made up of several ethnic groups that include African Americas, Italians, Koreans, and Puerto Ricans. The movie takes place on a particularly hot day during the summer time. The extreme heat causes tensions between the different races in the neighborhood. In this paper, I will attempt to show how mise-en-scène, camera work, editing, and sound are used to convey “explicit” and “implicit” meaning in one scene in Do the Right Thing.
With this movie set in the 1962 the majority of white people still looked down on blacks and thought t...
Despite the fact that the character of Phyllis as the “tough as nails” perpetual, intentional aggressor is a valid attempt to obliterate the image of women as the oppressed, one interpretation of this role is that she ultimately seems to misrepresent herself, and females in cinema, anyway. Janet Todd, author of Women and Film, states that, “Women do not exist in American film. Instead we find another creation, made by men, growing out of their ideological imperatives”(130). Though these “power girl”characters are strong examples of anything but submissive and sexual females,the...
... middle of paper ... ... Despite the progress that blacks have worked toward since the days of slavery, society continues to give in to the monetary benefits of producing self-disparaging entertainment and media. It is not only up to the directors, editors, producers and writers to establish this change, but it should also be the demand of the people, or the consumer.
W. Griffith wanted to show that blacks were inferior to the white population. African Americans were considered, uneducated, monsters, and violent. Throughout the film whites were trying their hardest to keep African Americans from gaining too much power, or any power at all. D. W. Griffith wanted to convey the message that it was a mistake to give black people freedom, and African Americans were not smart enough to handle power or freedom. In certain scenes, director D. W. Griffith showed blackface actors acting violent, drunk, and smoking. Throughout the film there were lynchings to put black people back where they belonged. If there were any black actors throughout the movie, they were either servants or slaves. In a scene with African Americans being servants, there are smiles on their faces, and what seems to be happiness while being servants. White people started to get the message that African Americans were happy to be subservient to whites. D. W. Griffith was telling this story through the eyes of a white man, he wanted whites to believe that slavery was wonderful for African Americans, and that they always wanted to work for whites. There was not a very positive relationship between African Americans and whites throughout the movie. Although a law was passed for interracial marriage, it was still not accepted by either
Over the course of approximately one-hundred years there has been a discernible metamorphosis within the realm of African-American cinema. African-Americans have overcome the heavy weight of oppression in forms such as of politics, citizenship and most importantly equal human rights. One of the most evident forms that were withheld from African-Americans came in the structure of the performing arts; specifically film. The common population did not allow blacks to drink from the same water fountain let alone share the same television waves or stage. But over time the strength of the expectant black actors and actresses overwhelmed the majority force to stop blacks from appearing on film. For the longest time the performing arts were the only way for African-Americans to express the deep pain that the white population placed in front of them. Singing, dancing and acting took many African-Americans to a place that no oppressor could reach; considering the exploitation of their character during the 1930's-1960's acting' was an essential technique to African American survival.
“If I were white, I could capture the world!”, she complained. Dorothy Dandridge was the first African-American to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress and the first African American to be on the cover of Life. This did not exclude her from prejudice. Searching for strong leading roles in movies that fit her talents was impossible, but positions as extras and background characters were always available. Directors offered Dandridge supporting roles as a slave, servant, or savage, but Dorothy declined. When Dandridge performed there were strict rules she had to follow. For example, she was forbidden to speak to the audience, ride the elevator, pass through the hotel lobby, gamble in the casino, and use the bathrooms. At nightclubs, Dorothy was given a storage space as a dressing room and a dixie cup as a makeshift bathroom. After a long day of work, Dorothy was not given the chance to relax in the swimming pool or else it would have to be drained for “health issues”. Dorothy Dandridge proved that on the road of life, many people will try to stop or prevent you from reaching your goal. She advises us to ignore that and keep moving
Another option for African-American women included the purchases of skin lightening products to allure to an “interracial” appeal of acting that boomed in the late 1950s into the early 1960s (fig. 17). The film was also heavily assessed for its frequent sexualized scenes. Sexuality in the “Classic Hollywood” era especially in the 1950s was suggestive through various innuendos given the various production codes. But in Carmen Jones, Carmen’s sexuality is blatant and pointedly represented when she unabashedly throws herself at Joe in a way that no white actress would have. This follows the “Jezebel” archetype, in association with impureness, shamelessness or being a morally unrestrained woman, which throughout history was synonymous with certain stereotypes of black women.
One of the most influential and popular sub-genres of the 1970’s was Blaxploitation. This sub-genre of film spanned across many different genres. Blaxploitation films dominated such genres as action with films such as Shaft (1971) and Foxy Brown (1974). Blaxploitation thrilled audiences with horror films such as Blacula (1972) and Blackenstein (1973). The genre made audiences laugh hysterically with such films as Uptown Saturday Night (1974) and Dolemite (1975). Since Blaxploitation spans across many genres what can be or cannot be considered Blaxploitation? The films Black Caesar (1973) and Car Wash (1976) are two prime examples of what is and is not Blaxploitation.
Black individuals had a perceived power that was enough to make a change in the black film industry of the 1970s for black women. They were the stereotypical mammy, tragic mulatto role or sex object that did not have the right to own her body. Blaxploitation was at its peak during the 1970s, where black films were made for black audiences and were full of stereotypes. Pam Grier part buck, mammy and mulatto would challenge this idea by making political messages in her films, that women, too, are assertive. Traditionally women are played as submissive to men, but, “Although men manhandle them, Grier ... also took liberties with men, at times using them as playful, comic toys” (Bogle 228). Taraji P. Henson would become the modern day Pam Grier, a dominating figure in black film.
During the 1970’s Shaft represented a different outlook on the urban culture. Most movies would cast African Americans as the typically gangster or as a low life individuals. Actors were so excited about being included in Hollywood lifestyle they weren’t concerned with the jobs they were taken. There weren’t rarely any African Americans shown in a positive manner, such as a king, queen, judge,