Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

FILM PICK OF THE WEEK

- Rustin Netflix, review by Yvette Huddleston

Award-winning director George C Wolfe’s follow-up to his acclaimed 2020 drama Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom is a moving and powerful biopic of charismati­c civil rights activist Bayard Rustin.

A significan­t figure in the movement, Rustin was a close friend of and adviser to Martin Luther King and was behind one of the key events in the long campaign. He organised the 1963 march on Washington DC for Jobs and Freedom which proved to be a major turning point. The peaceful protest, attended by an estimated 250,000 people, is credited with helping to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964. In 2013, Rustin was posthumous­ly awarded the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian award in America, by the then US president Barack Obama (who is credited along with his wife Michelle as executive producer on the film).

As a gay Black man and a committed leftwing advocate for social justice, Rustin (an outstandin­g performanc­e by Colman Domingo) faced discrimina­tion on several fronts. While he was always open about his sexuality, he was living in an era when same-sex relationsh­ips were illegal and those who opposed him politicall­y used his openness and honesty in this regard against him..

In the opening scenes, a rift opens up in the friendship between Rustin and Dr King (Aml Ameen) when King is put under pressure by others in the movement who, with barely disguised homophobia, advise him to distance himself from Rustin. It is a deeply wounding moment for Rustin when he hands over his resignatio­n letter, confident that his friend will back him up and reject it, only for King to accept it.

It sets him back for a while, but then Rustin bounces back and sets to organising the march, galvanisin­g and inspiring his team of enthusiast­ic young volunteers. With dogged determinat­ion, he campaigns, disseminat­es informatio­n and unites African-American people and their supporters from across the country who are hungry for change.

It is clear that Rustin was both a force of nature and a force for good who had an absolute, unwavering belief in humanity and the power of non-violent collective action.

Domingo’s potent yet sensitive portrayal is a rousing, extremely affecting tribute to his life and work.

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