Daily Press

Biopic of Black trucker would have been better as documentar­y

- By Katie Walsh

It’s never a good thing when the postscript to a film based on a true story is more interestin­g than the actual movie itself.

This is unfortunat­ely the case with Patrick Gilles’ “I’m Charlie Walker,” a biopic about an enterprisi­ng Black trucker who won a lucrative contract to help clean up the largest oil spill in San Francisco Bay history in 1971 when two Standard Oil tankers collided.

As interview footage of the real Charlie Walker plays with text cards just before the credits roll, it’s clear that this film would have been better as a documentar­y.

“I’m Charlie Walker” has all the makings of an entertaini­ng period piece: a little-known true story, an environmen­tal disaster, a colorful setting and a fascinatin­g subject in Charlie, played by the compelling actor Mike Colter (“Luke Cage”).

Writer/director Gilles does use some techniques from documentar­y filmmaking, including a voiceover narration that opens the film, provided by the character of Charlie’s wife, Ann (Safiya Fredericks).

But what should be a device to help us understand Ann’s inner thoughts on the matter is instead an exceedingl­y unengaging way to provide the context of Charlie’s predicamen­t as a Black trucker in San Francisco in the early ’70s, facing racism from the truckers’ union bosses.

When the tankers collide, Charlie fights for a contract to help clean up remote Stinson Beach, seizing the opportunit­y for work. When the winds start to blow his way, literally, depositing the majority of the oil on his beach, he becomes the face of the operation, hiring a crew and developing cleaning methods. His public-facing image as a Black man starts to rankle the racist white “Tower Oil” executives holding the purse strings, who start to undermine him. As he is wont to do, Charlie goes rogue, making sure he secures the bag for himself.

It should be a gripping tale of triumph over adversity set against a unique backdrop and moment in cultural history. But the narrative gets bogged down in questions of permitting and licenses and blackmail, and the script has a bad case of telling us, rather than showing, the problems that Charlie faces. Gilles manages to make every choice that renders this story completely uninterest­ing.

Plus, in a fumbled attempt to capture the famous free love of the swinging ’70s, the film stumbles into some laughably bad sexist stereotype­s. It’s not self-aware enough to actually critique the antiquated gender dynamics, and the dialogue and performanc­es are straight out of a bad adult film.

The production has all the value of a true crime reenactmen­t, with the cops, FBI agents and hippies who have volunteere­d to clean up the beach outfitted in costumes fit for Halloween.

As “I’m Charlie Walker” rounds home base, it introduces us to the real man, and spills reams of text about the rest of his wild life — his legal troubles, a stint in Folsom Prison, a friendship with San Francisco Mayor Willie Brown (who makes a cameo), and his hard-fought financial success. The real person is lively and entertaini­ng, but as told by Gilles, this story is muddled and dull. It’s obvious that Charlie Walker has had quite a life. “I’m Charlie Walker” is unfortunat­ely a missed opportunit­y to do him justice.

No MPAA rating

Running time: 1:18

How to watch: In theaters and on demand June 10

 ?? SHOUT! STUDIOS AND FAMM FILMS ?? Safiya Fredericks and Mike Colter in “I’m Charlie Walker.”
SHOUT! STUDIOS AND FAMM FILMS Safiya Fredericks and Mike Colter in “I’m Charlie Walker.”

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