The Sunday Guardian

JUDAS AND THE BLACK MESSIAH JOINS SURGE OF BLACK STORIES

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LOS ANGELES: Just a few years after the #OscarsSoWh­ite uproar in Hollywood, Black culture is making its mark on this year’s award season with critically acclaimed films like “One Night in Miami,” “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom” and the latest release, “Judas and the Black Messiah.”

Out in movie theaters and on streaming service HBO Max on Friday, the movie tells the story behind the killing in 1969 of 21 year-old Black Panther activist Fred Hampton at the hands of Chicago police.

The “Judas” of the tale is FBI informant Bill O’Neal, who was encouraged to infiltrate the Black power movement and whose actions led to the fatal raid on the apartment where Hampton lay sleeping.

“White Hollywood has attempted to try in the past to stifle voices that weren’t white, and that shit’s over. It’s a good time and things are moving forward,” said LaKeith Stanfield, who said he sought to find some humanity in his portrayal of O’Neal.

“As a collective society, we have to try to do better and hold our people in positions of power to a certain standard and not allow people who tell the truth to be murdered in this way,” Stanfield added.

“Judas and the Black Messiah” and its cast have already received multiple award nomination­s, including for British actor Daniel Kaluuya as Hampton.

Kaluuya, who starred in horror film “Get Out”, said he felt privileged to play the charismati­c chairman of the Chicago branch of the Black Panther Party.

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