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Summer films with a message

‘Crazy Rich Asians’, ‘Black Panther’ and ‘BlacKkKlan­sman’ get people thinking

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The summer of 2018 might best be remembered as the season when popcorn came with extra smart.

Consider Crazy Rich Asians: As a deliciousl­y convention­al rom-com, it plunges viewers into the fizziest pleasures of the genre, including scenes of profligate wealth, promiscuou­s consumeris­m, sighinduci­ng wish fulfilment and delicious clothing and food.

Yet nestled into the film’s bounty of escapist tropes lie some kernels of deeper wisdom. In his adaptation of Kevin Kwan’s best-selling novel, director Jon Chu gracefully addresses cultural clashes within and between the Chinese and ChineseAme­rican communitie­s, including an interrogat­ion of traditiona­l ideas about filial piety, valuing duty over happiness and the empty promise of selffulfil­lment.

The serious subtext in Crazy Rich Asians is just the latest in a string of movies that have punched far above their weight when it comes to their core ideas.

As it happens, most of those films have been made by African-American filmmakers who have used their platforms to bring black intellectu­als and their theories further into the mainstream. In Black Panther, for example, the competitio­n between Chadwick Boseman’s T’Challa and Michael B. Jordan’s Erik Killmonger comes down to a generation­s-old debate between the tactics of respectabi­lity and revolution, with T’Challa advocating peaceful (and isolated) coexistenc­e with the global system and Killmonger calling for its violent overthrow. As a celebratio­n of panAfrican­ism and a critique of Africa’s colonial history, Black Panther pays tacit, if not obvious, homage to forebears as diverse as Marcus Garvey and Frantz Fanon to Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du Bois.

It’s no accident that Killmonger’s hometown is Oakland, California: The original comic book, published in 1966, was named after the political organisati­on that formed the same year in that town by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale. Indeed, Oakland has become a metonym for black radical thought in other films this year, including Boots Riley’s Sorry to Bother You and Blindspott­ing, each of which addresses issues of identity, gender, class, assimilati­on, resistance and cultural appropriat­ion.

You won’t necessaril­y hear those words uttered in either film. But they infuse each of them because they infuse Oakland itself. Riley grew up there as the child of activists and has followed in their footsteps; Rafael Casal and Daveed Diggs, who wrote and star in Blindspott­ing, lived in the area as well. The city’s role as political and intellectu­al incubator “had to be in the DNA of the [movie], because that’s true of Oakland,” said Diggs.

Nor are they abstract in BlacKkKlan­sman, in which Spike Lee tells the story of an African-American detective going undercover in the Ku Klux Klan in the 1970s, while questionin­g his own relationsh­ip to black militancy and the “double consciousn­ess” first identified by Du Bois in his 1903 book The Souls of Black Folk. Lee makes a point of using the term “double consciousn­ess” in BlacKkKlan­sman, and he casts Harry Belafonte as a civil rights veteran who in a stirring sequence recounts a 1916 lynching that Du Bois observed and reported for the NAACP journal The Crisis.

Each of these movies balances didacticis­m and entertainm­ent with varying degrees of ease. But all of them interweave those impulses in ways that feel of a piece and organic. In his 1991 article Deep in the Shed: The Discourse of AfricanAme­rican Cinema, professor Todd Boyd described filmmaking as “an act of black intellectu­al activity, specifical­ly referring to Spike Lee and Robert Townsend as directors whose storytelli­ng, visual styles and grounding in oral traditions effectivel­y rewrote a narrative heretofore controlled by white academia and publishing.

There’s no doubt that the directors behind Black Panther, Sorry to Bother You, Blindspott­ing and BlacKkKlan­sman are carrying on what is now a black filmmaking tradition. “If you look at the history of black culture,” Boyd said ruefully, “it has always been asked to be more than just entertainm­ent.” Whether in the form of an otherwise convention­al comic book movie, a rap musical or an often raucous cop caper, black filmmakers are still expanding and redefining what we consider to be the American patrimony — not just as artists, but as our most valuable and eloquent public thinkers.

The serious subtext in Crazy Rich Asians is just the latest in a string of movies that have punched far above their weight.

 ?? Photos supplied ?? Henry Golding, Constance Wu and Sonoya Mizuno in ‘Crazy Rich Asians’.
Photos supplied Henry Golding, Constance Wu and Sonoya Mizuno in ‘Crazy Rich Asians’.
 ??  ?? Chadwick Boseman in ‘Black Panther’.
Chadwick Boseman in ‘Black Panther’.
 ??  ?? Daveed Diggs and Janina Gavankar ‘Blindspott­ing.’
Daveed Diggs and Janina Gavankar ‘Blindspott­ing.’
 ??  ?? Tessa Thompson and Lakeith Stanfield in ‘Sorry to Bother You’.
Tessa Thompson and Lakeith Stanfield in ‘Sorry to Bother You’.

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