29 Days Of Black History – Day 22: BlacKkKlansman

Tagline: Infiltrate Hate

Release Date:  8/10/18
Genre:  Drama/Biography
Rating:  R
Director:   Spike Lee
Studio(s):   Blumhouse Productions, Monkeypaw Productions, Perfect World Pictures,
QC Entertainment, Focus Features
Running time:  135 mins.

Cast:  John David Washington, Adam Driver, Topher Grace, Laura Harrier, Ryan Eggold, Paul Walter Hauser, Corey Hawkins, Harry Belafonte, Robert John Burke.

Story:  The film is based on the 2014 memoir Black Klansman by Ron Stallworth.  Set in the late-1970s in Colorado Springs, the plot follows the first African-American detective in the city’s police department as he sets out to infiltrate and expose the local chapter of the Ku Klux Klan.

In the late 1970s, Ron Stallworth is hired as the first black officer in the Colorado Springs Police Department. Assigned to work in the records room, he faces racial discrimination from his coworkers. After he requests a transfer to undercover work, he is assigned to infiltrate a local rally where national civil rights leader Kwame Ture (a.k.a. Stokely Carmichael) gives a speech. At the rally, Stallworth meets Patrice Dumas, president of the “Black Student Union” at Colorado College. While she takes Ture to his hotel, Patrice is stopped by a racist patrolman, who threatens Ture and gropes Patrice.

Later, Stallworth is reassigned to the intelligence division.  After reading about a local division of the Ku Klux Klan in the newspaper, he calls the organization, pretending to be white, and speaks with the president. Stallworth recruits his Jewish coworker, Flip Zimmerman, to pose as Stallworth in order to meet the Klan members. Zimmerman meets the president, Walter Breachway, Felix Kendrickson, and Ivanhoe, who cryptically refers to an upcoming attack.

Calling Klan headquarters in Louisiana to expedite his membership, Stallworth begins regular phone conversations with Grand Wizard David Duke. Kendrickson suspects Zimmerman of being Jewish and tries to make him take a polygraph test at gunpoint, but Stallworth breaks the Kendricksons’ kitchen window as a distraction. Stallworth begins dating Patrice, but does not tell her that he is a police officer.

Duke visits Colorado Springs for Stallworth’s induction into the Klan. Over the real Stallworth’s protests, he is assigned to a protection detail for Duke. Once Zimmerman is initiated, masquerading as Stallworth, Felix’s wife Connie leaves the ceremony to place a bomb at a civil rights rally. Stallworth realizes her intentions and alerts local police officers. When Connie notices a heavy police presence at the rally, she puts Felix’s backup plan into action and plants the bomb under Patrice’s car. Stallworth tackles her as she tries to flee, but uniformed officers detain and beat him despite his protests that he is working undercover.

The bomb maker, recognizes Zimmerman from a prior arrest. He, Felix and Ivanhoe arrive and trigger the bomb while Ron is being detained. Not realizing where Connie hid it, they detonate it while standing next to Patrice’s car and are killed in the explosion. Zimmerman arrives and frees Stallworth, and Connie is arrested.

Police Chief Bridges congratulates the team for their success, but orders them to end their investigation and destroy the records. Stallworth receives a call from Duke, and he reveals that he is black before hanging up. While Patrice and Stallworth discuss their future, they are interrupted by a knock on the door. Through the window in the hallway, they see a flaming cross on a hillside surrounded by Klan members.  Source:  Wikipedia; IMDB; Giphy.com.

Trailer:

29 Days Of Black History – Day 21: Hidden Figures

Hidden Figures

Release Date:  1/6/17
Genre:  Drama
Rating:  NR
Running Time:  127 mins.
Director:  Theodore Melfi
Studio:  20th Century Fox

Cast: Taraji P. Henson (Katherine Johnson), Octavia Spencer (Dorothy Vaughn), Janelle Monae (Mary Jackson), Kevin Costner (Al Harrison), Kirsten Dunst (Vivian Michael), Jim Parsons (Paul Stafford), Mahershala (Jim Johnson), Aldis Hodge Aldis Hodge (Levi Jackson).

Details:  As the United States raced against Russia to put a man in space, NASA found untapped talent in a group of African-American female mathematicians that served as the brains behind one of the greatest operations in U.S. history. Based on the unbelievably true life stories of three of these women, known as “human computers”, we follow these women as they quickly rose the ranks of NASA alongside many of history’s greatest minds specifically tasked with calculating the momentous launch of astronaut John Glenn into orbit, and guaranteeing his safe return. Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, and Katherine Gobels Johnson crossed all gender, race, and professional lines while their brilliance and desire to dream big, beyond anything ever accomplished before by the human race, firmly cemented them in U.S. history as true American heroes.  Source(s):  20th Century Fox, official site; IMDB.

Trailer #1:

Trailer #2:

Teaser Trailer:

29 Days Of Black History – Day 20: Detroit

 

Release Date:  8/4/17
Genre:   Drama/Based on Actual Events
Rating:  R
Director:  Kathryn Bigelow
Studio(s):  Annapurna Pictures, First Light Production, Page 1
Running Time:  143 mins.

Cast:  John Boyega (Melvin Dismukes), Will Poulter (David Senak), Algee Smith (Larry Reed), Jacob Latimore (Fred Temple), Jason Mitchell (Carl Cooper), Hannah Murray (Julie Ann Hysell), Kaitlyn Dever (Karen Malloy), Jack Reynor (Ronald August), Ben O’Toole (Robert Paille), Anthony Mackie (Karl Greene), Nathan Davis, Jr. (Aubrey Pollard, Jr.), Peyton Alex Smith (Lee Forsythe), Malcolm David Kelley (Michael Clark), Joseph David-Jones (Morris), John Krasinski (Norman Lippitt), Laz Alonso (John Conyers), Ephraim Sykes (Jimmy), Leon Thomas, III (Darryl), Gbenga Akinnagbe (Aubrey Pollard, Sr.), Chris Chalk (Officer Frank), Jeremy Strong (Attorney Lang), Zurin Villanueva (Martha Reeves), Tyler James Williams (Leon), Karen Pittman (Mrs. Dismukes), Samira Wiley (Vanessa).

Details:  Based on the Algiers Motel incident during Detroit’s 1967 12th Street Riot, the film’s release commemorated the 50th anniversary of the event.

Story:   On Sunday, July 23, 1967, the Detroit Police Department stage a raid on an unlicensed club during a celebration for returning black veterans from the Vietnam War. While suspects are being arrested, a mob forms and starts throwing rocks at the officers before looting nearby stores and starting fires, which begins the 12th Street Riot. With the authorities unable to maintain order, the Army National Guard and Army paratroopers are called in to provide assistance. On the second day of rioting, two cops pursue a fleeing looter, one of them shoots and kills the man, but is allowed to remain on duty until his superiors can decide what to do.

The Dramatics, a professional R&B group arrive in Detroit hoping to score a recording contract. Seconds before their scheduled performance at a music hall, the police shut down the venue and order them to leave the city. En route, their bus is attacked by rioters and the group subsequently splits up, with lead singer Larry Reed and his bodyguard Fred Temple renting a room at the local Algiers Motel for the night. They meet two white girls who introduce them to their friends Carl Cooper, Aubrey Pollard, Jr., Michael Clark and Lee Forsythe. Carl Cooper and another friend stage a prank using a starter pistol, upsetting the girls who move to the room of Karl Greene, a Vietnam War veteran, while Larry Reed and Fred Temple return to their own room.

Melvin Dismukes, a private security guard, is assigned to protect a grocery store from looters and ingratiates himself with the Guardsmen. Carl decides to fire several blanks from his pistol in the direction of the troops to frighten them, but they mistake it for a sniper attack and determine that it came from the Algiers due to the pistol’s muzzle flash. Led by David Senak, the Michigan State Police, National Guard, and Detroit Police arrive at the motel to investigate. Entering the building, David Senak kills Carl Cooper when he tries to escape and plants a knife next to his body as he bleeds out and dies.

The police round up everyone in the hotel and line them against the wall, demanding to know who the sniper was. Despite not finding a weapon, David Senak terrorizes and interrogates the occupants of the hotel. Unwilling to get involved, most of the state police and National Guard leave.  Senak orders several suspects to be moved to different rooms and subjected to mock executions in order to terrify the others into confessing. One officer kills Aubrey Pollard, as he did not realize that the executions were supposed to be fake.  Fearing arrest, Senak finally permits them to leave, but only if they swear to keep silent. Karl Greene and Larry Reed agree, but Temple is shot in the chest by the cops after he persists in telling them that he sees a body.

As the riots die down, Dismukes, while working his other job in a factory, is arrested and charged with murder after one of the white girls identifies him as being present at the Algiers that night. His fellow officers are questioned as well and when everyone except David Senak confesses, they are also charged. The judge ultimately refuses to accept any of the confessions as evidence, and without a solid case, the all-white jury acquits Dismukes and his co-defendants of all charges. Dismukes confronts three officers but finds himself powerless to get any justice for the victims.  Source(s):  IMDB; Wikipedia.

Trailer:

Carl Weber’s Influence

Release Date:  2/20/20; BET+
Genre:   Drama/Thriller
Rating:   NR
Director:  Trey Haley
Studio(s):   Influence Productions, Tri Destined Studios, Urban Books Media, BET Films
Running Time:  Unknown
Cast  Roger Gueneveur Smith, Deborah Cox, Kellita Smith, Columbus Short, Nadine Ellis, Gary Dourdan, Anthony Hamilton, Drew Sidora, Bebe Drake, Broderick Hunter, Todd Anthony.

Story:   Best selling author, Carl Weber introduces us to the Hudsons, a family of African-American lawyers lead by famed attorney Bradley Hudson. Bradley is the Johnnie Cochran of our time; and along with his son Lamont, daughter Desiree and new wife Carla, the Hudsons make up some of the best legal minds in the country. They are going to need it to defend Grammy award winning singer Savannah against the murder charges of killing her celebrity husband Kyle Kirby.  Source:  Blackfilm.com.

Trailer:

29 Days Of Black History – Day 19: Loving

Release Date
11/4/16

Genre 
Drama/Biography

Rating
PG-13

Director
 Jeff Nichols

Studio(s) 
Raindog Films, Big Beach Films, Focus Features

Running Time
123 mins

Cast 
Joel Edgerton as Richard Loving
Ruth Negga as Mildred Loving
Nick Kroll as Bernie Cohen
Michael Shannon as Grey Villet
Will Dalton as Virgil
Terri Abney as Garnet
Alano Miller as Raymond
Marton Csokas as Sheriff Brooks
Sharon Blackwood as Lola Loving
Christopher Mann as Theoliver
Winter-Lee Holland as Musiel Byrd-Jeter
Jon Bass as Phil Hirschkop

Details:  Film tells the story of Richard and Mildred Loving, the plaintiffs in the 1967 U.S. Supreme Court (the Warren Court) decision Loving v. Virginia, which invalidated state laws prohibiting interracial marriage.

Richard and Mildred Loving

Story:   In 1958, Richard Loving, a white construction worker in Caroline County, Virginia, falls in love with a local black woman, Mildred Jeter.  Once Mildred discovers that she is pregnant, they decide to marry, but knowing that interracial marriage violates Virginia’s anti-miscegenation laws, they drive to Washington, D.C. to tie the knot.  Richard plans to build a house for Mildred less than a mile from her family home.

Soon afterward, Mildred’s home is raided. The Sheriff tells Richard that their marriage license has no validity in Virginia and they are both arrested.  The couple plead guilty to breaking the anti-miscegenation law and are sentenced to one year in prison. However, the judge suspends the sentence, on condition that they not return to Virginia together for at least 25 years. The Lovings move to Washington but briefly return to Caroline County so their first child, Sidney, can be delivered by Richard’s mother, who is a midwife. Arrested again, they are cleared when their lawyer informs the judge that he erroneously advised them they could return.

Mildred and Richard have two other children together but eventually Mildred grows frustrated by being away from the country.  Her frustration grows when she watches the March on Washington and she writes to Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy for help. Kennedy refers them to the American Civil Liberties Union. Lawyer Bernard S. Cohen takes the case and confers with constitutional law expert Phil Hirschkop. They conclude that the Lovings’ case has a good chance of going all the way to the Supreme Court and could lead to the overturning of similar anti-miscegenation laws across the nation.

After a minor auto accident involving one of their children, the Lovings decide to slip back into Virginia while their case moves through the courts. Their case gains national attention, and is profiled in Life magazine.  The state contends that people of different races were never intended to live together, and goes as far as to suggest the Lovings’ children are bastards. The state Supreme Court refuses to set aside the Lovings’ conviction. Undeterred, Cohen and Hirschkop appeal to the federal Supreme Court.  Before going to Washington, Cohen asks Richard if he has a message for the justices. Richard replies, “Tell the judge I love my wife.”

Several weeks later, the Supreme Court unanimously holds that laws prohibiting interracial marriage are unconstitutional. The film ends with the Lovings back in Caroline County, building their dream house which Richard began designing at the opening of the film. Over a wide shot showing family and friends at work, text informs the viewer that Richard died, a victim of a car accident, seven years later, and that Mildred, who never remarried, continued to live in the house Richard built for her until her death in 2008. Source:  Wikipedia; IMDB; Biography.

Trailer:

29 Days Of Black History – Day 18: Heat Wave

Release Date:  8/13/1990 (TV Movie)
Genre:   Drama
Rating:   R
Director:  Kevin Hooks
Studio(s):   Avnet/Kerner Productions, Propaganda Films, TNT, Turner Home Entertainment
Running Time:  100 mins.

Cast:  Blair Underwood (Robert Richardson), Cicely Tyson (Ruthana Richardson), James Earl Jones (Junius Johnson), Margaret Avery (Roxie Turpin), David Strathairn (Bill Thomas), Glenn Plummer (J.T. Turpin), Vondie Curtis-Hall (Clifford Turpin), Adam Arkin (Art Berman).

Story:   Heat Wave is a television movie about the 1965 riots in the Watts section of Los Angeles. It recreates the experiences of Bob Richardson, a young Los Angeles Times messenger who covered the riots and subsequently became the paper’s first African-American reporter.

As a teen, Richardson (Blair Underwood) comes from the South to Los Angeles with his best friend J.T.  (Glenn Plummer) and his parents (Vondie Curtis-Hall and Margaret Avery) to stay at the home of his grandmother (Cicely Tyson), who works as a housekeeper in Beverly Hills.  But they soon learn that Los Angeles is not a place of racial harmony as they had hoped, but rather they face the same sort of discrimination and oppression they had known at home.  They are hassled by cops and chased by white gangs. Unable to find work as a construction foreman, his former profession, Curtis-Hall settles for work as a janitor and salves his wounded pride with liquor.  Similarly, after Plummer`s ambition to become an airline pilot is thwarted by a school counselor, he winds up in a car wash with a half-pint in his pocket.  Underwood`s character, enlists in the Army, goes to college and gets a job as a messenger with the Los Angeles Times.

When the riot erupts, precipitated by a hassle between a white cop and two black men over a traffic violation, Richardson is sent to report from the scene, because, we are told, white reporters are being attacked. He does his job, but his stories, which first reflect the looting and arson, infuriate some of the neighbors.

When the riot is finally quelled, with the help of 14,500 National Guardsmen, the toll is substantial: 35 dead, 1,200 injured, 4,000 arrested, $200 million in damage and 600 buildings burned or looted.

The Los Angeles Times won a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the riots and the man on whom the Richardson character was based became the paper`s first black reporter trainee.  Other sources indicate that the real-life Richardson’s career reportedly went from the Times to small radio stations to homelessness.  Source:  Wikipedia; Chicagotribune.com; Daarac.org; TCM.

Trailer: