Arab Times

Radha Blank of ‘The 40-Year-Old Version’ isn’t late

An autobiogra­phical tale about a middle-aged playwright

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TBy Jake Coyle

he Sundance Film Festival is a showcase of new voices in cinema, and few have come through louder and clearer than Radha Blank’s. Blank wrote, directed and stars in her debut film, “The 40-Year-Old Version”. It’s a heavily autobiogra­phical tale, shot in black-and-white and on 35mm, about a middle-aged playwright in Harlem struggling to fulfill her career’s earlier promise. Faced with unappealin­g options, like a Harriet Tubman musical put on by white producers, she turns to an old passion, hip-hop, and begins performing as RadhaMUSpr­ime.

Blank, who has written for the series “She’s Gotta Have It” (on which she was also a producer) and “Empire”, first began the project as a web series that would have culminated in a mix tape. The death of her mother derailed the series, and Blank later realized “The 40-YearOld Version” needed a bigger canvas. Lena Waithe (“Master of None”, “Queen & Slim”) came aboard as a producer.

In an interview, Blank talked about her film and her Sundance breakthrou­gh.

AP: How would you describe your film’s connection with Judd Apatow’s “The 40-Year-Old ...”?

Blank: Honestly, I’m just like appropriat­ing his (expletive). People appropriat­e black culture all the time. I’m like, “Hey, Judd. I’m comin’ for you!” I think he will have a great sense of humor about it, but I’m totally appropriat­ing his (expletive). I love it when I say “40-Year-Old Version” and they go, “That move came out 15 years ago.” And I go, “Nope! V-ER-S-I-O-N.” But also trying to stay in the spirit of Judd Apatow, black protagonis­ts are quirky and awkward and can’t figure things out and are having identity crises at 40. I would hope one day my films can be in the canon of his storytelli­ng. I lived in LA for about three years and even though I look like I might have blended into the cool arts scene, I always felt like Larry David. There are people who look like me who have those odd moments where there are clashes of culture right in front of them. AP: What compelled you to start writing this? Blank: I was fired from a film job. This is like before I was writing for TV. I got a job. Someone had seen a play of mine and they hired me to adapt a book. And I got fired off the job. And I was kind of devastated and felt a little powerless and just decided, you know what? (Expletive) it. I’m going to make a web series so that I’m in charge. No one can fire me. About two weeks before we were going to shoot the first two episodes, my mom passed away and it pretty much devastated my life. Like we were like Dorothy and Sophia domestical­ly, as a viewer of “The Golden Girls.” We shared the same birthday and she’s the person who nurtured all these storytelli­ng seeds in me. I was probably going to quit anything creative because my biggest champion and friend was now gone. I was going to go back to school and become a social worker. I’m glad I didn’t. I probably saved more children by not becoming a social worker. AP: Is your protagonis­t you? Blank: It’s me but a heightened version. She is who I wish I could be all the time. She tells it like it is. What we have in common is how we use rejection to fuel an idea. My character, the idea of her becoming a rapper is a joke until she starts rhyming. And for me, when I first decided I wanted to shoot this in black and white. Everyone was like, why would you do that? It’s a matter of trusting your impulses.

AP: How does it feel to be making your film-making debut at this stage in your life?

Blank: “Auteurs” are reserved for older filmmakers. And groundbrea­king, fresh films seems to be associated with young filmmakers.

I’m somewhere in the middle. I’ve been telling and crafting stories for over 20 years. When it came time to make the film, I knew exactly what it is I wanted to say. For people who know me and know my work, it was just a matter of time before I got here. It’s kind of this idea that we never stop learning about who you are. You can have revelation­s about yourself and what you should be doing at any age.

AP: And that includes rapping for you. But you bring a different perspectiv­e to hip-hop.

Blank: It’s all of the bravado of hip-hop but it’s from a person whose body is changing. There’s some hot flashes in there. AARP is sending me (expletive) in the mail. I know a lot of people who feel that way, I just don’t see it reflected in mainstream culture. Especially with hip-hop. I love this culture. I am the same age as hip-hop culture. Some of the culture is oversexual­ized and over-saturated and so loud. That’s part of why I wanted to film it in black and white. Black and white cools it down.

AP: Before Sundance, a lot of the conversati­on was disappoint­ment in the homogeneit­y of the filmmakers being celebrated at the Oscars.

Blank: I was disappoint­ed but I wasn’t surprised. To me, it fluctuates very much like mainstream culture. Whatever is decided to be the thing is the thing. For one year, the thing was diversity. I don’t know that it is now. When I think about some of the performanc­es I saw in film, like “The Last Black Man in San Francisco” or Adam Sandler. Wait, Adam Sandler doesn’t get it? If Adam Sandler doing his best work isn’t getting acknowledg­ed, then maybe we need to create new platforms of recognitio­n and stop giving the Oscars so much power. It’s kind of like my protagonis­t. This is about a person who just has to pivot their head and realize there are other kinds of success. It might be time to look in other directions to find that. (AP)

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