BlacKkKlansman – first look review

Adam Driver and John David Washington in BlacKkKlansman

Despite the vital steps taken by activist movements such as Black Lives Matter in response to the persistent and increasingly public slaughter of black men at the hands of predominantly white police officers, it took NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick taking a knee during the national anthem to fully reignite the national conversation around police brutality and racism in the US. It’s apt, then, that Spike Lee’s sensational new film about a trailblazing black cop features an African-American former football player in the lead role.

In BlacKkKlansman– Lee’s first feature to premiere in Cannes since 1991’s Jungle Fever – John David Washington stars as detective Ron Stallworth, who early on in the film is described as the “Jackie Robinson of police officers”. Like the boundary-breaking baseball icon, Stallworth crossed colour lines at a pivotal time in America’s history by becoming the first African-American officer to serve in the Colorado Springs Police Department. Together with his Jewish partner Flip Felix “Flip” Zimmerman (Adam Driver), Stallworth successfully infiltrated a local chapter of the Ku Klux Klan in the late 1970s, eventually becoming its leaders.

The pair’s courageous under cover exploits form the basis of Lee’s latest interrogation of American morality, the tone of which is set by an early title card that playfully reads: “Dis joint is based on some fo’ real, fo’ real shit”. But before Stallworth and Zimmerman set to work, Lee kicks things off in searing fashion with what could easily be mistaken for a too-hot-for-TV SNL sketch; Alec Baldwin spewing fire-and-brimstone bigotry as a buttoned-down far-right extremist.

Lee counterpoints this with a rousing speech at a meeting of black students and, later, with contemporary newsreel footage showing peaceful protests marred by violence, as well as public address given by the likes of Donald Trump and David Duke. The latter white nationalist is portrayed in the film by Topher Grace, whose benign, almost boyish image alludes to the fact that racism comes in many forms, and that the greatest threat to liberty and social equality are those willing to stoke and exploit people’s prejudices for their own political gain.

There’s romance and a great deal of humour in the film: at one point Grace’s Duke attempts to explain the difference between how a black man and a white man pronounce certain words; another highlight sees the former Grand Wizard on the receiving end of a racial epithet-strewn crank call. In the film’s most poignant scene, the veteran singer, screen actor and social activist Harry Belafonte recalls the horrific story of Jesse Washington, a black teenage farmhand who was lynched on the streets of Waco, Texas, in 1916 as a baying crowd watched. Elsewhere, clips from Gone with the Wind and DW Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation serve as powerful reminders of the long shadow cast by the Confederate flag, which America has yet to step out of, in some quarters more than others.

Lee’s astuteness both as a social commentator and a filmmaker lies in his ability to entertain you while making you think. In BlacKkKlansman, the writer/director pays homage to various blaxploitation-era touchstones as a way of celebrating black art and culture, specifically in the context of its emergence and evolution as a form of resistance. He also states in no uncertain terms that America has always been in the business of selling hate. If in doing so Lee succeeds in raising a few laughs, it’s only because he speaks the inexorable, painful truth.

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BlacKkKlansman – first look review
By Adam Woodward

May 15, 2018 at 04:30AM
via Little White Lies http://lwlies.com/festivals/blackkklansman-cannes-review/