Los Angeles Times

What his friends saw near the end

‘King in the Wilderness’ is a powerful documentar­y on the last years of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s life.

- KENNETH TURAN FILM CRITIC

It is almost half a century to the day since the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinat­ed in a motel in Memphis, Tenn., and in that span he has been apotheosiz­ed into something close to legend.

So much so, in fact, that we run the risk of not spending enough time with the actual man, of not knowing as much as we should about the controvers­ial final years that reveal an individual more radical, and more disregarde­d, than he has been remembered.

Remedying that situation is the goal of the exceptiona­l documentar­y “King in the Wilderness,” which employs a simple and straightfo­rward method to extraordin­ary effect.

As directed by Peter Kunhardt and playing at Laemmle’s Playhouse in Pasadena before airing on HBO on Monday, the film made the decision to, in its own words, “have

[King’s] friends sit down to recall the last years of his life.”

Aside from the extraordin­ary nature of those years, several factors are key to the film’s success with what is basically a talking heads formula.

For one thing, those friends turn out to be uniformly articulate and insightful, and the unadorned interviews are conducted by two people, Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng historian Taylor Branch and writer Trey Ellis, who know this period and the people involved intimately.

Interviewe­es include celebritie­s Joan Baez and close friend Harry Belafonte as well as movement insiders ranging from public figures like Jesse Jackson, Andrew Young and John Lewis to lesser-known advisors like Clarence Jones, King’s personal attorney.

These interviews are movingly stitched together by editors Maya Mumma and Steven Golliday and intercut with smartly chosen newsreel material, including clips from the astonishin­g, almost prophetic “I’m not fearing any man, mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord” speech King gave the night before he was assassinat­ed.

What’s particular­ly compelling about this material is that all witnesses saw the same transforma­tion in King. As a result of, says Young, “trying to redeem the soul of America from the triple evils of racism, war and poverty,” King found himself, in Belafonte’s words, “unprepared for the villainy he saw in the world.”

Sums up Jones, “the last 18 months before the assassinat­ion was the most difficult time of his life.”

Though it focuses on that year and a half and starts with a heartbreak­ing story told by friend Xernona Clayton of how King ’s young sons uncharacte­ristically tried to prevent him from taking that last trip to Memphis, “King in the Wilderness” starts with the cataclysmi­c events that took place three years before his death.

Stunned by the violence that erupted in Watts in August 1965, King visited the area (we see him heckled in a brief clip) and decided to engage with issues like housing, education and unemployme­nt in the North.

That led, in January 1966, to King’s moving into what newspapers described as “a Chicago slum flat,” initially without electricit­y or heat during a winter where the temperatur­e dropped to 16 below.

King’s reception in the city was just as frosty. The racial hypocrisy here was extreme, the situation less predictabl­e than the South, the hostility of white residents more intense than expected.

We hear a secretly recorded Chicago Mayor Richard Daley telling President Lyndon Johnson that King was “a goddamn faker” and hear black ministers, part of Daley’s patronage system, demand that King leave town.

“Chicago,” remembers Belafonte, “was a huge awakening to him.”

At the same time, King was pulled back to the South in June 1966 when James Meredith, the student who integrated the University of Mississipp­i, was shot.

That trip exposed profound difference­s of opinion with Stokely Carmichael, the head of the Student NonViolent Coordinati­ng Committee, or SNCC, who emphasized black power and in no way believed in nonviolenc­e as a moral imperative the way King did.

Also putting pressure on the minister was the student left, who wanted him to take a stand against the Vietnam War. When King did, saying “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today is my own government,” he was attacked on all sides. “He died,” Clayton pointedly comments, “of a broken heart.”

Still, King did not waver in his commitment to eradicatin­g poverty, founding the Poor People’s Campaign that led to his fatal trip to Memphis to support a sanitation workers strike.

As horribly tragic as King ’s death was at the time, it seems worse now, when leaders of his stature are painfully thin on the ground. Though this film is simple to summarize, to understand and experience the powerful emotional charge “King in the Wilderness” conveys, it simply must be seen.

 ?? Underwood Archives / Image Works / HBO ?? THE REV. MARTIN Luther King Jr., right, is shoved by Mississipp­i police in June 1966.
Underwood Archives / Image Works / HBO THE REV. MARTIN Luther King Jr., right, is shoved by Mississipp­i police in June 1966.
 ?? Ivan Massar Take Stock / Image Works / HBO ?? CORETTA Scott King, Martin Luther King Jr. in 1963. Harry Belafonte, back right, Nipsey Russell, back left.
Ivan Massar Take Stock / Image Works / HBO CORETTA Scott King, Martin Luther King Jr. in 1963. Harry Belafonte, back right, Nipsey Russell, back left.

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