CATEGORIES Documentary, Drama, Independent, Deals, ThinkFilm, Remakes and Sequels, Cinematical Indie, Movie News, Cinematical
Emmett Till, a young black man who was murdered in 1955 because he whistled at a
white woman (though those accused of the killing were acquitted of the crime by an all-white jury, they proudly
confessed a few years later) is already the subject of a riveting documentary, The
Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till. That film, which spent about six months in very limited release last year,
was the result of nine years of research by director Keith Beauchamp
and was fundamental in getting the Till case reopened. Now, Beauchamp plans to revisit the story, but in a fiction
film. Produced by Frederick
Zollo (who has a history with the subject matter, having also produced Ghosts of Mississippi and Mississippi
Burning) and Thomas
Levine, the project is expected to "focus on Till's life and slaying as well as the crime's immediate
aftermath." Given the team behind the movie, it certainly has a good chance to be successful. The story is powerful and awful, and is one that we shouldn't ignore - that said, however, didn't the documentary already tell it, and and tell it well? Do we really need another, fictional telling?