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‘Black or White’ has nasty streaks

Review This Kevin Costner movie brings out the stalest chestnuts from discussion­s of race past

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Near the end of Black or White , Mike Binder’s excruciati­ng new movie about race, a bitter battle over the custody of a young girl named Eloise Anderson (Jillian Estell) reaches its courtroom climax. Eloise, who is of Caucasian and AfricanAme­rican heritage, has been living with her grandmothe­r Carol (Jennifer Ehle) and grandfathe­r Elliot (Kevin Costner), because her mother died at her birth, and her father, Reggie (Andre Holland), struggles with drug addiction.

But when Carol dies, leaving the alcoholic Elliot as Eloise’s sole guardian, Eloise’s other grandmothe­r, Rowena (Octavia Spencer), mounts a bid for full custody. Rowena’s campaign requires Reggie to testify that he has been deprived the parental rights he badly wanted to exert.

To try to prove that Reggie is a liar, Elliot’s lawyers ask Reggie to spell his daughter’s name. Since much of Black or White is concerned with the supposed difference between respectabl­e black people and shiftless ones, when Reg- gie comes up with “Loeze,” the scene is meant to communicat­e both that Reggie doesn’t know his daughter and that he’s a negative stereotype made flesh.

Among the problems with Black or White is that the movie cares precisely as little about Eloise as Reggie supposedly does. What’s supposed to be a movie about what’s best for Eloise is an opportunit­y for the adult characters to preen about their righteousn­ess and learn supposedly important lessons.

When Elliot hires Duvan (Mpho Koaho), an African immigrant, to tutor Eloise in maths, Rowena is sceptical. “Got a little black math tutor, that’s going to do it?” she demands of Elliot. “Take care of that whole half of her soul?”

But Black or White never really answers that question by exploring Eloise’s relationsh­ip with her tutor. Instead, the movie spends more time showing Duvan being bewildered by Eloise’s African-American relatives in much the same way Elliot often is. Duvan is just another device for Black or White to set up a distinctio­n between good black people and bad ones, as if those are actual categories that exist and not products of a racist imaginatio­n.

Similarly, Black or White shows little interest in what Reggie’s absence has meant to Eloise. At one point, Rowena actually suggests that Reggie should continue the fight for custody because it’s good for him. “She needs to be in your life, baby, making you whole,” Rowena coos. “That’s why you’re so sick.” Later, Reggie is inspired to save Elliot from drowning when he drunkenly falls into his swimming pool after seeing a drawing that Eloise made of Reggie and Elliot together.

Eloise is just as much a device to Black or White as she is to the two sets of adults competing to care for her.

There are plenty of other nasty streaks running through Black or White . Binder trots out the stalest chestnuts from discussion­s of race past.

It says something that even with these other rotten elements of the movie looming large, the disregard that Black or White shows for Eloise is still shocking. “Why do you always have to go there?” Elliot petulantly asks Rowena when they’re talking about Eloise’s heritage. “Why do you always have to pretend there’s no there to go to?” Rowena fires back at him.

It might have been a powerful exchange if Black or White had any idea at all where “there” was on the map of the American racial conversati­on.

 ?? Photos by Rex Features ?? Costner with Jillian Estell inBlack and White.
Photos by Rex Features Costner with Jillian Estell inBlack and White.
 ??  ?? Director Mike Binder andKevin Costner.
Director Mike Binder andKevin Costner.

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