Dayton Daily News

Best films available online made by Black women

- By Katie Walsh

This week marks the last of Black History Month, before Women’s History Month kicks off in March. So to send off one month and usher in another, check out some of the best films available to stream made by Black women (which is always worth your while at any time of the year).

One of the very best film debuts of 2020 was the effervesce­nt “FortyYear-Old Version,” written, directed by and starring Radha Blank. An autobiogra­phical film about a playwright dabbling in rap, Blank’s film is a funny, fresh and an incisive take on how Black art, especially made by women, is received by white critics and gatekeeper­s.

The legendary Oscarwinni­ng actress Regina King made her directoria­l debut in 2020 with “One Night in Miami,” streaming on Amazon Prime. The film features an epic onenight hang sesh among Sam Cooke, Malcolm X, Cassius

Clay and Jim Brown. King and the actors have already been nominated for several awards, catch up before they scoop up more nomination­s. (And check out King hosting “Saturday Night Live” a couple of weeks ago; she’s excellent.)

Another awards-nominated 2020 directoria­l debut: Channing Godfrey Peoples’ Texas-set family drama “Miss Juneteenth,” starring a luminous Nicole Beharie in a role that finally allows her to demonstrat­e the full range of her enormous talent. A soulful slice of life is not to be missed. Watch it on Kanopy or rent it for $2.99 on Amazon or YouTube.

2020 also marked the first year a Black woman helmed a big-budget action film, with Gina Prince-Bythewood directing the sci-fi comic book adaptation “The Old Guard,” starring Charlize Theron as an ancient warrior leading a special forces team. Exciting new stars Kiki Layne, Luca Marinelli and Marwan Kenzari costar across from Theron and Matthias Schoenaert­s in this exciting action flick that boasts a rich lore. Watch in on Netflix.

Director Ava DuVernay has become a household name for her film work, and her distributi­on imprint Array has brought many independen­t films from creators of color to a wider audience. Watch her searing documentar­y “13th,” about the prison-industrial complex and systemic racism in America, on Netflix, or rent her Martin Luther King, Jr. biopic, “Selma,” starring David Oyelowo, for $2.99 on Amazon or YouTube.

Chinonye Chukwu’s exceptiona­l film “Clemency” also grapples with the stark realities of the United

States’ prison system, starring Alfre Woodard as a warden overseeing death row executions, facing the reality of an incarcerat­ed man (Aldis Hodge) who desperatel­y wants to live. Watch it on Hulu or rent it for $3.99 on Amazon or YouTube. Nia DaCosta, whose next film, the remake of “Candyman” produced by Jordan Peele, is due later this summer, made her debut with the Tessa Thompson-starring “Little Woods,” on Hulu and Kanopy, or $3.99 digital rental. The film explores the border between Canada and a North Dakota oil boom town, where two sisters struggle to get on their feet.

On Netflix, Dee Rees’ Oscar-nominated 2017 film “Mudbound,” about two Mississipp­i sharecropp­ing families, white and Black, the racist beliefs that divide them and the world war that demonstrat­es a different, more egalitaria­n way of life. On HBO Max, watch Kasi Lemmons’ Oscar-nominated 2019 film “Harriet,” with Cynthia Erivo in the role of the legendary abolitioni­st Harriet Tubman.

 ?? STUDIOS VIA AP
PATTI PERRET/AMAZON ?? This image released by Amazon Studios shows director Regina King, left, and actor Kingsley Ben-Adir on the set of “One Night in Miami.” King was nominated for a Golden Globe for best director on Wednesday, Feb. 3 for her work on the film.
STUDIOS VIA AP PATTI PERRET/AMAZON This image released by Amazon Studios shows director Regina King, left, and actor Kingsley Ben-Adir on the set of “One Night in Miami.” King was nominated for a Golden Globe for best director on Wednesday, Feb. 3 for her work on the film.

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