Small Axe (2020)
Directed by Steve McQueen
This is a series of five films set within London’s West Indian community from the late 1960s to the early 1980s.
It is a wholesome series that trough true stories demonstrates how progressive change is really achieved.
“Freedom is a Constant Struggle” was a slogan on a political button from the 1960s.
This is the truth. Real change is not going to come from electing a new president, that might help, but it is not the revolution, not the force behind real change.
Change comes from people banding together, organizing, and finding a way through for themselves while at the same time putting pressure on the local and national power structures.
The New Deal didn’t come out of FDR and thin air. It was the manifestation of decades of struggle of union organizers and socialist activists. This is how change is made.
This very fine cycle of films shows how people struggle and make change, one story at a time.
(And we get to go to a really cool party too!)
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Mangrove
Directed by Steve McQueen
Written by Alastair Siddons & Steve McQueen
In 1970, in the Notting Hill section of London, Frank(Shaun Parke) opened a restaurant called Mangrove. He only wants to have a nice restaurant but from the start he is faced with
harassment, raids by racist cops.
The community rallies and holds a demonstration that is attacked by a police riot.
There is a trial and the people learn how to defend themselves.
Powerful courtroom drama at the end.
Lovers Rock
Directed by Steve McQueen
Written by Steve MCQueen and Courttia Newland
This is an 1980s house party. We see the audio-DJ equipment being moved into the house. The women cook. The rug is rolled up, all the preparations for a house party.
The movie is like being in a party in the past that you were not really invited to but can attend invisibly, a fly on the wall and flying through the party room. People hook up some successfully, some not, just like real life.
Groovy 80s reggae/dub music soundtrack.
++++++++++++
Red, White, and Blue
Directed by Steve McQueen
Written by Steve MCQueen and Courttia Newland
This one brings up a lot of questions. It is based on a true story of Leroy Logan (played by John Boyega) . A young black man with another career who becomes a policeman. He has seen his father abused by cops when he was younger. He intends to change the institution of the police force from within. His father doesn’t want him to become a cop. He hates them for a good reason. The son, Leroy Logan, excels during training.
But he is the object of racism within the force. Can a black man change this institutional racism from within?
The story ends before the question is answered.
(This is being written a week for the Righwing, racist, Pro-Trump assult of the Capatol building. It is coming out that many of those participating are involved with law enforcement, cops from out of town who traveled to DC for this event. Fascist elements are embedded into the police and the military. This is a serious problem.)
+++++++++++++++
Alex Wheatle
Directed by Steve McQueen
Written by Alastair Siddons & Steve McQueen
Sheyi Cole plays Alex Wheatle. Alex is an orphan or abandoned child who is abused, hit, misunderstood, by the big white orphan home momma. He keeps running into trouble. Looking for something, a parent, a leader, he drifts into a bad crowd.
He discovers music, black struggle and poetic expression. But he’s lucky because trouble leads him to a wise mentor that shows him just what he needs.
+++++++++++++++
Education
Directed by Steve McQueen
Written by Alastair Siddons & Steve McQueen
Kingsley (played by Kenyah Sandy) is a 12 year old school boy who is having trouble in school. There is a scene early on of the children taking turns reading aloud in class and Kingsley not being able to do so. (This writer knows personally how horrible an experience like that is in a grade school classroom.)
Kingsley is given standardized intelligence tests by the school system and it is determined that he is to be transferred to a “special needs school” which is really a school where they warehouse children unwanted by the system.
But these are movies of struggle that lead to solutions, at least for the particular problem if not to a grand ultimate revolution to make everything magically better. There are community groups of West Indian organizers who want to do something about the racist seperation, the giving up on finding a way to educate, that is only the path to a low wage menial labor, and dead end life.
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These films are partly financed and presented in the USA on Amazon Prime. There is a sort of irony in this ruthless, powerful, and exploitative corporation bringing us this type of motion picture material that we need, if we need any at all.
This is another institution that will have to be forced to change from the bottom, the warehouse workers, up.
Moving picture production is a very expensive art form and the money comes from money which is very often saturated with the blood and sweat of those who brought it to the investors.
Freedom IS a Constant Struggle.
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