Los Angeles Times

UNSUNKEN PLACE

‘Get Out’ has defied many expectatio­ns — including those of its director

- By Jen Yamato jen.yamato@latimes.com

When Jordan Peele received the news that the biggest gamble of his career had earned four major Academy Award nomination­s, including best picture, director and original screenplay, he got on the phone with his “Get Out” star, Daniel Kaluuya — and broke down in tears.

“It was very emotional,” said Peele, the comedian-turned-director who made his directoria­l debut with the race-themed social thriller, made for a modest $4.5 million, about a young African American man (Kaluuya) who goes to meet his white girlfriend’s family only to find himself trapped in a sinister nightmare.

“Whenever I talk to him about this stuff, I just break down,” Peele said Tuesday morning. “We both went from knowing we were taking this huge risk and that we could very well be hated for the risk, to being here and getting the acknowledg­ment of our peers — peers who, by the way, we didn’t even feel like we could call our peers a year ago.”

Peele’s nods launch him into the annals of Oscars history with poignant distinctio­n: He is only the fifth black filmmaker in 90 years nominated for directing. And he’s the third first-time filmmaker to hit the nomination­s trifecta — picture, director and screenplay — all at once.

The honors remind Peele that he had once sidelined his aspiration­s of directing because of how improbable they seemed.

“I left my dream of being a director behind long ago, and I think that was because, while I have a great respect for film, I didn’t really believe there was a place for very many black directors,” Peele said. “I thought it would be harder for me as a person of color to convince someone to let me use their money to make a movie.

“Many years later, I came back to my original dream,” he said. “And the fact that it’s been received the way it has been received teaches me a lot about how I internaliz­ed the system.”

“It’s his heart, man,” said Kaluuya, the 28-year-old Brit whose lead actor nod is a career first.

“[‘Get Out’] is genre, but the big thing we’re tapping into in terms of being black is that this ain’t jokes,” he said. “This is real pain. We had to communicat­e it in some sort of way by telling a story. I called him, and he was crying, and I was like, ‘You did the work, Jordan — you did the work and you deserve this.’”

Exactly a year ago, Peele and Co. were at the Sundance Film Festival anxiously awaiting word on whether the film’s first audience would embrace their bold and unflinchin­g narrative, whose horrors are frightenin­gly relatable for most folks who don’t find themselves privileged and white in America.

That midnight screening, a “secret” sneak the night before the 2017 Oscar nomination­s were announced, was an undeniable success.

“I had no idea it would get awards attention or break records commercial­ly,” said producer Jason Blum, whose Blumhouse Production­s teamed with QC Entertainm­ent and Peele’s Monkeypaw Production­s to make the film. “A very solid drop for a genre movie is 50%; the movie dropped 20% in its second weekend, and that’s when we knew we had an anomaly on our hands.”

That anomaly has persisted in the pop culture conversati­on longer than usual for a film released in February (or any time of year).

“It makes me very happy that this movie has caused people to talk about race,” said producer Sean McKittrick of QC Entertainm­ent, who shares the best picture nod with Peele, Blum and Edward H. Hamm Jr., also of QC. “It makes me very unhappy to see how the country has devolved under President Racist.

“If you look back in history, some of the greatest films of all time were genre films that really had something to say about where we are in the world,” he added. “And ‘Get Out’ is a reflection of a really dark time in our country.”

Since opening to widespread acclaim and going on to gross $254 million in worldwide box office, the film has given voice to moviegoers struggling to escape their own respective sunken places, as evidenced by the fan art that started flooding into Peele’s social media mentions — renderings of Kaluuya’s face, of Chris in the sunken place, of the teacup.

“The sunken place, to me, is the silencing of voices and the silencing of expression, and the cries for help and the cries for justice,” Peele said. “And this is an instance in which I feel like my cry for justice has been heard, has been magnified, and is being acknowledg­ed by my peers and the world. Right now, today, I feel like I’m in the opposite of the sunken place.

“But the important thing to note is that many people in America — as we’ve seen in this past year — have been in and remain in the sunken place. You look at how the president treated Colin Kaepernick, how [ESPN] treated Jemele Hill for speaking her mind. There are so many checkpoint­s at which art and expression are silenced and muffled. So, yes, this feeling shows me that there is an opposite to the sunken place. But there’s so much more work to do before this country is out of it.”

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? JORDAN PEELE is the third first-time filmmaker to be nominated for best picture, director and screenplay and the fifth African American director to be nominated.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times JORDAN PEELE is the third first-time filmmaker to be nominated for best picture, director and screenplay and the fifth African American director to be nominated.

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