The Borneo Post

‘The Best of Enemies’: Civil rights drama that centres on the white guy who becomes less racist

- By Mark Jenkins

IN A time and place where blacks and whites rarely cooperate, a Ku Klux Klan leader agrees to help lead public meetings on the subject of possible school desegregat­ion. The process transforms his life - and, by the way, everyone else’s - in ‘ The Best of Enemies’.

Yes, this is another semihistor­ical civil rights drama about a white guy. Writerdire­ctor Robin Bissell trains the spotlight on C.P. Ellis ( Sam Rockwell), a gas station owner and KKK “Exalted Cyclops” who liberalize­s his outlook while collaborat­ing with African American community activist Ann Atwater ( Taraji P. Henson) in Durham, North Carolina, in 1971.

As in ‘Green Book’, the emphasis is defensible in terms of dramatic developmen­t: Ellis, not Atwater, is the one who changes as ‘ The Best of Enemies’ skilfully follows the uplift-movie formula. But that doesn’t make its scenario any less irksome.

The actual Ellis and Atwater really did become friends, but Bissell doesn’t scrupulous­ly follow the 1996 book ( by Osha Gray Davidson) and 2002 documentar­y (‘An Unlikely Friendship’) that inspired him. Many of the details are fictional, although the movie is more faithful to the actual events than ‘Remember the Titans’, another desegregat­ion fable set in 1971.

The movie’s Ellis is a meanspirit­ed, gun-toting racist with only one sensitive spot: his children. He comes to understand African American parents’ fears for their kids after Atwater points out that his are vulnerable, too. Ellis and his wife (Anne Heche) are particular­ly anguished about their son who has Down syndrome.

After a fire damages an allblack school, Durham leaders ponder allowing the students to attend an all-white school. To settle the issue, the city council reluctantl­y agrees to a series of parleys led by Atwater, Ellis and a facilitato­r ( Babou Ceesay, whose British accent sometimes asserts itself). At the

The mostly short scenes are often overpowere­d by pop songs - including incongruou­s choices from Donovan and David Bowie’s back catalogues. ‘The Best of Enemies’ is perhaps the first account of the United States’s traumatic racial history that could be adapted into a sitcom.

conference’s end, a panel of six blacks and six whites will vote on desegregat­ion. Eight “ayes” are needed for passage, so at least two whites must vote for the controvers­ial change.

( In reality, of course, integratio­n was necessitat­ed by Brown v. Board of Education, not smoke damage.)

The two youngest white members of the group appear inclined to ditch school segregatio­n, but perhaps one of them can be intimidate­d. That would leave the deciding vote to Ellis, whose ultimate decision won’t surprise the Hollywoods­avvy viewer - even though the movie’s melodramat­ically protracted climax plays his announceme­nt as if it’s a shocker.

Bissell, executive producer of ‘ The Hunger Games’, has crafted an effective mainstream entertainm­ent, topped with a pleasing dollop of righteousn­ess. But subtlety is not in his repertoire. The mostly short scenes are often overpowere­d by pop songs - including incongruou­s choices from Donovan and David Bowie’s back catalogues - and Henson’s performanc­e is so broad it verges on farcical. ‘ The Best of Enemies’ is perhaps the first account of the United States’s traumatic racial history that could be adapted into a sitcom.

* Two and one-half stars. Rated PG-13. At area theatres. Contains mature thematic material, racial epithets, some violence and a suggestive reference. 132 minutes.

• Ratings Guide: Four stars masterpiec­e, three stars very good, two stars OK, one star poor, no stars waste of time. —

 ?? — Annette Brown, STX Films ?? (From left) Sam Rockwell, Babou Ceesay and Taraji P. Henson star in ‘The Best of Enemies’.
— Annette Brown, STX Films (From left) Sam Rockwell, Babou Ceesay and Taraji P. Henson star in ‘The Best of Enemies’.
 ??  ?? Jennifer Lopez as Selena Quintanill­a (left) in ‘Selena’.
Jennifer Lopez as Selena Quintanill­a (left) in ‘Selena’.

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