The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Atlanta helps give life to ‘The Hate U Give’

- By Ronda Racha Penrice For the AJC

Many movies run from reality. Not “The Hate U Give.”

Shot in Atlanta and starring Amandla Stenberg and Atlanta’s own Algee Smith, “The Hate U Give,” adapted from Angie Thomas’ New York Times best-selling young adult novel of the same name, takes on the major issues of police killings, gun violence and Black Lives Matter directly impacting the black community.

Some of these are issues Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms admitted to affecting her own family as she helped kick off the film’s Atlanta premiere screening at Regal Cinemas Atlantic Station Oct. 3. (The film opened last week in Atlanta ahead of its Oct. 19 national release.)

“It was an opportunit­y for me to really think about the conversati­ons I’m having with my sons, particular­ly my 16-year-old son, and just some of the hurt and baggage that our family is still carrying from the murder of my nephew, not at the hands of a police officer, but just the layers of wounds that we have in our community.”

Although told from the lens of Starr Carter (Stenberg), the police murder of her childhood best friend and crush Khalil (Smith) drives the story. The film kicks off with Starr’s father, Maverick (Russell Hornsby), giving “the talk,” instructin­g Starr, her slightly older half brother Seven and much younger brother Sekani, who are just kids, on how to handle the inevitable police encounters that will plague their lives.

As a teenager, Starr masks the reality of her black Garden Heights community from her white boyfriend Chris (“Riverdale’s” KJ Apa) and best friend Hailey (Sabrina Carpenter) at Williamson, the predominan­tly white school she and her brothers attend. After Khalil’s murder, where she was the lone witness, becomes a major news headline and the center of a Black Lives Matter-style protest, Starr’s two worlds collide, and she must find her voice.

On the Atlanta red carpet, Stenberg shared that her approach to playing Starr included “trying to honor the book as much as possible” and “taking pieces from my own life in ways that kind of related because I had kind of a parallel experience growing up in a black community and going to a school that’s predominan­tly white cross town.” She also was concerned about “trying to honor the lives of those who have been killed by police, who have been killed by gun violence.”

The film and Stenberg’s Starr resonated strongly with 15-year-old Shianna Franklin, who watched alongside her Benjamin E. Mays High School classmates who were happy to see their school as Williamson on the big screen. Taken by Franklin’s sobbing throughout the film, Mississipp­i rapper and Atlanta resident David Banner closed out his last post-screening Q&A with Stenberg; the film’s director, George Tillman Jr.; the book’s author, Angie Thomas (also a Mississipp­i native); and more, by asking why.

 ?? PARAS GRIFFIN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Actress Amandla Stenberg pose with fans at “The Hate U Give” Atlanta red carpet screening at Regal Atlantic Station on Oct. 3.
PARAS GRIFFIN / GETTY IMAGES Actress Amandla Stenberg pose with fans at “The Hate U Give” Atlanta red carpet screening at Regal Atlantic Station on Oct. 3.

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