Sheril Antonio

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Where Is the Help for Black Filmmakers in Hollywood?

Posted: 03/ 2/2012 10:34 am

Congratulations to Ms. Octavia Spencer for winning the Academy Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role for The Help (2011). I thoroughly enjoyed her on screen passion, humor and audacity. Her irreverence shimmered like glitter, her rage took on an artistic flair, and the relationship she formed with another "outsider" in the film was telling of her humanity beyond the boundaries of race so clearly defined and articulated in the film.

This week's Oscar win for Spencer, however, will no doubt reinforce and fuel the controversy about what kind of black images get supported and celebrated in Hollywood. Ms. Spencer's character, Minny Jackson, was as spunky, fearless, and charming as Hattie McDaniel's Mammy was in Gone With the Wind (1939), but therein lies the issue. James McBride articulated the problem in his essay "On Being A Maid" in this way: "On Jan. 24 President Obama, our first African American president, delivered his third State of the Union address. On that same day, the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences nominated two gifted African American actresses, Viola Davis and Octavia Spencer, for Oscars for playing maids in The Help. This is 73 years after the first African American to win an Oscar, Hattie McDaniel, garnered the award for the same role -- as a maid, and a slave maid at that -- winning the Oscar in the best supporting actress category on Feb. 29, 1940."

The truth is that for the past 10 years most of the Academy Awards that have gone to black actors were for roles that embody what some may call "nostalgic" views of blackness:

-Halle Berry for Leticia Musgrove in Monster's Ball (2001)

-Denzel Washington for Alonzo Harris in Training Day (2002)

-Jaime Foxx as Ray Charles in Ray (2004)

-Jennifer Hudson as Effie White in Dreamgirls (2006)

-Mo'Nique for Mary Lee Johnston in Precious (2009)

-Octavia Spencer for Minny Jackson in The Help (2011)

So, where is The Help for black filmmakers in Hollywood?

This conversation is by no means new and took place most recently in the Hollywood Reporter in an article entitled: "So What's On Your Mind, Spike Lee?" Among other topics, Lee discussed his recent difficulty getting films made, asking, "Where are the people of color? That's what it comes down to. How many people, when they have those meetings and vote on what movies get made, how many people of color are in those meetings?" These are indeed important questions at a time when what was called "African American Cinema" some years ago has all but disappeared. I hosted a part of a conversation on this same topic last November 2011 at The Museum of The Moving Image where notables such as Richard Wesley, Warrington Hudlin, Nelson George, John Singleton and Matty Rich examined where we were on the "20th Anniversary of the New Wave of Black Cinema." What was disclosed at that gathering is exactly what Lee echoed in his interview: "I think there have been some improvements and some steps taken back. But overall, the variety of films being offered to African-American audiences is not where it was 10, 15 years ago. It's very narrow."

The truth is that the range of black characters in American cinema has indeed narrowed again for audiences in general. I still dream, however, of a time when the desire for diversity of black images belong to all of us, black and white. I still dream of a time where we have many images of African Americans to chose from, images that come from black and white directors. I still dream...

 
Congratulations to Ms. Octavia Spencer for winning the Academy Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role for The Help (2011). I thoroughly enjoyed her on screen passion, humor and ...
Congratulations to Ms. Octavia Spencer for winning the Academy Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role for The Help (2011). I thoroughly enjoyed her on screen passion, humor and ...
 
 
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maxfax
Taa - dah!
02:02 PM on 03/11/2012
Hollywood prefers "old school" like Clint Eastwood's ill-advised remake of "A Star is Born" although it's slated to include Beyonce in the lead and ?Tom Cruise?
09:24 PM on 03/08/2012
Still thinking that Holywood is for African-Americans? Academy Award is created by Whites, for Whites. Get that into your head and you won't have to worry about Hollywood. Hollywood was, is, and will always be a big part of the social engineering and psychological operations machines of White Supermacy. What makes anyone think that Hollywood will work against its interest by elevating Blacks to a position Whites reserved for themselves?
maxfax
Taa - dah!
02:03 PM on 03/11/2012
The question should be who are the Hollywood "captains of industry" and take it from there.
08:59 PM on 03/13/2012
You're right!
12:30 PM on 03/06/2012
Some women have spent most of their life pushing civil rights and advocating for education. Many young African American women have been rewarded with educational opportunities, well paying jobs, fame in the entertainment world and politics. To represent African American women rewards based on the image of a slave maid 73 years after the first award is an insult to all African American women. The suggestion is that African American women have declined rather than progressed. Are African American women successful as long as she is in a subservient role? Further, early history shows most African Americans had fathers who were white and mothers that were black?

In the movie Raintree County Elizabeth Taylor portrayed a white slaveholder who went crazy because she feared she had "one drop" of black blood. In society the verdict presented her as forever black. Her husband, a white abolitionist wanted her to free her slaves. "I love Henrietta (her black nanny and her father's concubine) I wanted her to be my mother. She was kinder to me than Mama." That was her justification. "Oh, no, I can't free my slaves. What would I do without them". After all they waited on her hand and foot all the day long with no pay, pampering and required to profess her "great beauty". That was her reality.

What is "nostalgic" about that HELL!? Incidently, her mother went crazy with jealousy when her husband moved Henrietta into the mansion house and burned the plantation to the ground.
12:10 AM on 03/06/2012
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12:39 PM on 03/05/2012
I agree with the OP. There absolute is not a diverse pool of African American imagery on the big and small screen.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
02:04 PM on 03/11/2012
There's no diversity in the board room of these media conglomerates.
10:32 PM on 03/04/2012
this blog is something else....instead of posting what people say....they pick and choose the comments......it's like absolute communist...
10:24 PM on 03/04/2012
I did not see "The Help"....U was very affended with this type of role for Black women...I really don't like when Hollywood portray Black women as inferior to White women and always the helper, care taker to white family, a maid, lower class, homely looking, not pretty, not dainty....not talking proper English.....Stereotype of what they think and what they want the world to Think of Black Women....

Why can't they give an award to Angela Bassit who always play good roles, or Regina King,, Nia Long.......etc.....

What about giving Black actress important roles, like doctors, lawyers, pilots, action figures, heros....etc...

What about the Black actress wining awards for these type of roles instead of Loud Mouth or "Aunt Ja Mamma" type roles
05:26 PM on 03/04/2012
I stopped going to the movies after Denzel was robbed of best actor when he played Malcom X to a blind Al Pacino in Scent of a woman i like Pacino a lot but no way he out performed Denzel Washington, after that farce i said i'm out and haven't been to the movies since. Tyler Perry has basically said "screw you" hollywood and now does his own thing. Spike Lee is still my favorite director but what bothered me was that at the BET honors where Spike was an honoree, Malcom X was not even mentioned as one of his accomplishments just plain stupid on BET's part.
10:50 AM on 03/04/2012
I beg to differ when you say the last 10 years, with the exception of Foxx's "Ray" and Hudson's for "Dreamgirl" every single Oscar that Blacks have received were for roles that are fitting of stereo types of what whites see us as. With all the outstanding roles and movies over the years, not one of those roles that were purely based upon good acting did a Black person recieve an Oscar. Even Speilberg has said that it was absolutely unheard of that "Color Purple" was nominated 11 times and did not walk away with a single Oscar. No other film that has ever received so many nominations and did not walk away with at least one award. Nor did Denzel win for "X" which was a far better film than "A Scent of a woman" which beat it out that year for best film. It is things like this that caused me to stop watching the farce called "The Academy Awards".

I would like to add in closing, my comments are not meant to dimish the wonderful acting of those whom did win Oscars.
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wkingsolomon77
04:02 PM on 03/04/2012
Look there are over 30+ million black folks in america,what they lack is unity and 4-7 love,they should wait on knowone to do what they know they should be doing
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The Common Village
Common Sense Solutions
09:11 PM on 03/04/2012
Money and access isn't a human numbers game. You have to have the assets to get your films shown. First you have to have some type of studio, then you have to have the ability to distribute the films. If you don't own any theaters, then you have a major problem getting the films you want to make seen. We could make blaxploitation films all day and get them shown. Studio's love the stereotypical films and roles. Not only the roles you see on the screen. It is the roles behind the scenes that we can't seem to penetrate. That is our issue. The 30 million African-Americans cannot support a mainstream film production.

We don't want to own the whole table, we just want a seat at the table. We created Negro leagues before and where are they now. We have HBCU's and most are suffering. We want to be successful as Americans, not African-Americans.
04:55 PM on 03/04/2012
I agree with you but Morgan Freeman's win for "Million Dollar Baby" is the exception.
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Joe Doughrity
Writer/Filmmaker
02:05 AM on 03/04/2012
Sometimes Black filmmakers do the impossible and it gets very little media coverage because they can't afford to pay top Publicists. Like beating "The Help" in it's debut weekend on a little know category in Hollywood called 'per screen average' on one AMC screen in Detroit.

http://shotownpictures.com/2011/08/18/box-office-results/
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wkingsolomon77
04:04 PM on 03/04/2012
Watch how much the movie monster games make,some groups of people love their own and will take care of their own.WE DID NOT SUPPORT RED TAILS
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J Rupel
"Let the lamp affix its beam..."
08:28 PM on 03/03/2012
Denzel Washington in "Training Day" represents a nostalgic view of blackness? "Precious" was a nostalgic view of blackness? "Ray" was? How exactly? I thought they were all pretty stark, which was the reason they were good movies.

If you want to talk about someone stuck on nostalgia, what about Tyler Perry? He can get anything made no matter how bad.

As for Spike Lee, the reason he has trouble making movies might have less to do with his skin color, and more to do with the fact he hasn't made a good movie in, like, fifteen years. Miracle at Santa Anna anyone?
savethecountry
We Could Build THE DREAM With Love
01:01 PM on 03/04/2012
Well, J, Alonzo Harris in "Training Day" was a murdering, drug-connected black cop with no ethics, certainly the view of some as police forces around the nation were integrated. "Precious" was a black single-mom with no apparent future and an uncaring, even cruel single mother. "Ray," as great a musician and showman as he was, was a womanizing drug addict.

The fact that Tyler Perry can get "anything made, no matter how bad" says more about what Hollywood considers "acceptable" from blacks than it does about black filmmakers of real substance.

As for Spike, as he's has aged and become more outspoken about the inequities in Hollywood, I'm sure it's become increasingly hard for him to find financing for films that might rival "Do The Right Thing" and "Malcolm X." The "You'll never work in this town again" line comes to mind.
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Crisdean Wulver
We've got our priorities screwed up.
11:22 PM on 03/05/2012
I agree. The criticism was way off target for Ray. It was a biography, for crying out loud.
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happyblackman
Gotta have more cowbell baby!
08:11 PM on 03/03/2012
One of my favorite movies was Akhila and the Bee, because it was about a young girl's academic pursuit, instead of dancing, music or sports. Lawrence Fishbourne was interviewed by Jay Leno and said it was hard to get financing because several studios did not think a movie about a little black girl, with black role models would sell. It raises the continual question about when will the so-called black power-brokers step in and see a void that can be filled by pooling their money to form a viable movie studio that not only represents minority voices, but also movies that go the independent route? I would think between Oprah Winfrey, Ice Cube, 50 Cent, Spike Lee, Will Smith and others, something can come about.
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UnknownSolider
10:10 PM on 03/03/2012
The movie Industry is a lot more complicated than getting a few people with some money together to finance a movie. 

Let me know when you have the answers to these questions:

1. Where will the movie be shown after its made, the Hollywood machine has all of the screens locked up for their movies.

2. How does this group of financiers collect their money from the theaters after the film is shown, without the Hollywood machine behind them. 

3. Will they pay Union Wages for Union quality work? 

The best thing for Black Americans do to in the film industry is to build up the African film industry.
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happyblackman
Gotta have more cowbell baby!
09:09 AM on 03/04/2012
I've heard that theory before, and it can work for some projects, but not all. The loomng problem with going to Africa to film is safety. Simply put, if black American filmmakers want to see more of their ideas on the big screen, they have to take this giant leap of faith and do things on the financing and distribution end. Everyone and their mother has a production company. Why not pool resources to create a film studio? It can be done with union workers and getting access to screens will happen.
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Crisdean Wulver
We've got our priorities screwed up.
11:32 PM on 03/05/2012
I have grown to hate Hollywood over the years. But what I hate is the poor writing and the poor choice of projects. And hate all the special effects and gore and horror.

But here is what I have been advising people to do for a long time. Video equipment has never been cheaper. And now a person can edit their own video with a computer. it's possible to make a very professional looking video movie with very little equipment.

People who want to buck the Hollywood system should get some equipment, find some good writers in their area, find some local actors to participate, and start their own production company. I wouldn't even worry about marketing in the beginning. Find people who are willing to do it for the love of it. And if you ever find a project that's got promise, pay everyone a percentage of future profits.

There is a feature length animated film called Seta Sings the Blues that was entirely animated by one woman on her computer. The only help she had was with voice overs and music. Here's a link to it if anyone is interested:

http://sitasingstheblues.com/

It's even been shown in theaters.
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wkingsolomon77
04:05 PM on 03/04/2012
NOTHING COMES ABOUT WHEN LOVE AND SUPPORT IS ABSENT
01:53 PM on 03/03/2012
Ray Charles doesn't exactly represent black nostalgia to me. The plot occurred in the past because Ray Charles occurred in the past. I wouldn't define a blind, virtuoso, figurehead of modern music and innovator as a stereotypical character. I think that role "embodied" the man intended. So we shouldn't celebrate black Oscar winners because they characterize blacks of the past? Seems like author would be more content with no Oscars whatsoever. I guess some find reason to feel victimized and praised simultaneously.
01:17 PM on 03/03/2012
The only two roles on his list that I've seen are the Halle and Denzel ones。。。and as far as I'm concerned they are as far away from being stereotypes as one can imagine!
04:17 PM on 03/02/2012
WOW,,,,I actually thought about this dynamic a few days ago!!