For some reason, Tyler Perry in drag, for the third time... is not considered a historical epic. If only transvestitism was more widely accepted.
| This Time It Will Be Funnier |
Hollywood laments a problem they create, and wring their hands with faux guilt that is just not credible. If the motion picture industry was interested in making black dramas here some ideas.
A black family deals with black on black violence. A crime is committed and none of their neighbors will testify. The family does not go postal, instead they are ground down by a system indifferent to their plight and a community terrorized by a criminal element.
Sounds dramatic to me.
A third-generation family is caught between the example of Booker T. Washington, the rage of Malcolm X and the passion of Dr. Martin Luther King.
This could easily be described as a historic epic.
A middle-aged father tries to explain to his son that family values, middle-class values and religious values are not unique to any particular race.
Sounds like a character study.
Problem Hollywood runs into, is their own racism. There are a limited number of “recognized" roles is for black actors. Most of them center around victimization and racism; most of them advance a cruel stereotype that doesn't exist today.
Conventional wisdom would suggest the federal program is needed to ensure a higher caliber role be offered to nonwhites.
No doubt next year Clint Eastwood's remake of A Star Is Born will land Beyoncé and Academy award nomination. But is this a solution or the perpetuation of a broken model?
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