Arab Times

‘Vanguard’ offers a sturdy recap of tumultuous history

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LOS ANGELES, Aug 19, (RTRS): Arriving around the 50th anniversar­y of the civil rights movement, and a resurgence of the protest against police brutality that significan­tly fueled it, “The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution” offers a sturdy recap of the titular organizati­on’s short, tumultuous history. Docu vet Stanley Nelson (“Freedom Summer,” “Jonestown,” “Wounded Knee”) doesn’t bring the era back to life quite as bracingly as something like the recent Swedish “Black Power Mixtape,” which had the advantages of using previously unseen footage and aiming for a more impression­istic, less historical­ly definitive account. But “Vanguard’s” very straightfo­rwardness also makes it perhaps preferable as an introducti­on to the subject, particular­ly in educationa­l settings. PBS plans a limited theatrical release this fall, before an early2016 broadcast premiere.

While in the early 1960s the focus on American racial relations was largely concentrat­ed on the South, where Martin Luther King Jr’s pacifist protests made stubborn headway, the national discourse took a startling turn westward in 1966. That year, Huey Newton and Bobby Seale founded the Black Panther Party — named after a creature that will back away to a point when threatened, but attack when cornered — in Oakland, Calif, largely in response to the local African-American community’s persistent harassment by police. Fighting intimidati­on with intimidati­on, they took advantage of the state’s then-liberal gun laws (which Gov Reagan then quickly sought to change) by appearing as an armed paramilita­ristic unit wherever there were reports of unnecessar­y law-enforcemen­t force. Their silent, watchful presence did indeed have a scarifying effect on local cops.

They also had an explosive impact on almost everyone else. While King’s humble, dignified, assimilati­onist approach had been successful to a point, the Panthers — looking terrifical­ly cool in their Afros, leather jackets, shades and black turtleneck­s — made AfricanAme­rican empowermen­t brash, sexy, radical and aggressive. The image and message hugely appealed to black youth, as well as many progressiv­e white intellectu­als, not to mention a burgeoning anti-war collegiate left consisting of all ethnicitie­s. (The Panthers also played up these constituen­cies with a prescient media consciousn­ess from the start.) But by the same token, the party’s “swagger” deeply alarmed many conservati­ves. It was one thing for middle-class white kids to toy with the notion of revolution; when angry, armed young blacks did, establishm­ent forces could actually imagine the government being overthrown.

FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover pronounced the Panthers the single greatest threat to the nation’s security. Taking advantage of their rapid national growth with little consistent vision or oversight, he planted informants to sow dissent in individual chapters. “No-knock” Fed raids of Panther HQ, sometimes justified by dubious or planted evidence, resulted in shootouts that on several occasions seemed like deliberate assassinat­ion plots — most notably the 1969 Chicago bloodbath that saw an unarmed Fred Hampton (whom the paranoid Hoover feared would become a “Black Messiah”) shot in the head point-blank, in bed. Meanwhile, Newton spent nearly three years in prison on an eventually overturned manslaught­er charge. Seale was likewise sent to prison, despite the outrage sparked by his courtroom treatment (at times shackled and muzzled on judge’s orders) while trying to defend himself. A third most-prominent Panther, Eldridge Cleaver, fled to Algeria. When Newton was freed, he and Cleaver sparred long-distance over the party’s direction, both growing increasing­ly irrational and isolationi­st.

A large number of surviving former members recall this heady era in a quick-cut parade of talkinghea­d interviews accompanyi­ng the expected wealth of archival footage. Much of the latter is familiar, as indeed is the whole saga — the Black Panthers have scarcely wanted for screen treatment before, both documentar­y and dramatized. An excellent soundtrack of vintage various-artist funk tracks is one aspect of the pro tech package that does capture the period’s live-wire political/cultural awakening at full force.

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