The Citizen (KZN)

Elba talks racism as Concrete Cowboy rides in

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Its biggest star is British, and its director is white.

But Concrete Cowboy, a critically acclaimed new film about at-risk black youths and horse owners in urban Philadelph­ia, offers a poignant message at a time of mass anti-racism protests in the United States, Idris Elba said this week.

The film follows a young black man (Caleb McLaughlin of Stranger

Things) who returns to an impoverish­ed Philadelph­ia ghetto. He must choose between a life of crime and the close-knit horse-rearing community of his estranged father (Elba).

“It was incredibly important to us that we tell this story of the fork in the road that you can take as a young man in this country,” Elba told the Toronto film festival, when asked about US anti-black police violence in an online talk.

“America didn’t change overnight. These are issues that have been going on for a long time – even where I’m from in England where there’s a huge knife-crime problem,” added the London-born star.

Director Ricky Staub stumbled upon the story, adapted from a novel, after spying a black cowboy riding a horse and a bright-red, decked-out buggy down the street outside his Philadelph­ia office window.

As characters in the film discuss, black cowboys were widespread but have been whitewashe­d out of history by Hollywood, and black urban riding clubs remain a proud, if little-known, tradition.

Lee Daniels, best known for directing the Oscar-winning Precious, admitted he was “shocked” to learn Staub was white, and initially declined to produce the project.

“For a quick minute

... you had to really think about it, because I was out,” he said. “And then I thought, I prayed, and I was ... ‘this is ridiculous, I’m in! This cat knows what he’s doing’.

“And so then I opened myself up to him.”

Reportedly shot for less than $10 million (about R166 million), the movie premiered in Toronto on Sunday.

Reviews praised an “astonishin­g street-level debut” for shining a light on a unique, but fading, subculture. –

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