Tag Archive: racism


EMPIRE OF LIGHT directed by Sam Mendes (UK, 2022)

I’m trying to imagine Sam Mendes’ pitch to the producers for this movie.

It’s about coming to terms with ageing, loneliness, a women with mental health problems, sexual harassment at the workplace, the state of the British nation in 1980, living with racism, making meaningful life choices and nostalgia for the days when cinemas were seen as dream palaces  

A novice director would have been asked to go away and think which story he really wanted to tell.  Any one could have made for an interesting story but putting them all together results in what my Italian friend called a minestrone. She didn’t mean it as a compliment!

This is the first film Mendes has both written and directed. His track record as a director based on screenplays by others is impressive but here he is guilty of using far too many ingredients and hoping a tasty dish will be the outcome.

It’s all beautifully filmed by Roger Deakins and the actors do their level best but ultimately it’s clear they have been given more than can chew. The emphasis on gloss and sentiment renders any presentation of moral issues or social questions at best superficial , at worst embarrassingly simplistic.

Olivia Coleman as  Hilary Small  and Micheal Ward  as Stephen  make for an unlikely couple –  believable as friends but not as lovers. Their relationship and the Empire cinema in Margate where they work exist in a kind of bubble. 

It is all so quiet!  

This is 1980 but it is as if Covid lockdown regulations were in place.  At one point Hilary and Stephen take an empty bus to a deserted beach of the coastal town. In another scene , after Stephen is beaten up by a racist mob his mother, a nurse, seems to be only member of staff in the local hospital.

Where is everybody else?  

Perhaps the pandemic meant that the use of extras was problematic. There’s certainly never any danger of social distancing. Details like this matter because they render the improbable plot and questionable characterisation even more far-fetched. Mendes has plenty of theatrical experience and his story might conceivably have made a better stage play albeit without the homage to cinema-going.  

With so many spinning plates on the go, there’s a real problem of how to conclude the film. We are presented with a sequence of endings but none can provide a miracle salvation.  

Far from being served with a delicious soup, this movie is a dog’s dinner.   

I Am Not Your Negro directed by Raoul Peck (USA, 2016)
i_am_not_your_negro

The story of Black men and women in America is not a pretty one. This is an understatement. From slavery and segregation to the present day struggle to convince diehard bigots that their lives matter, the story is dominated by violence and oppression.

This sobering documentary may focus mainly on events from the past but it is no abstract history lesson.

The film is based on James Baldwin’s ‘Remember This House’, his uncompleted memoirs about Malcolm X, Martin Luther King and Medgar Evers; three prominent civil rights activists who were all assassinated in the 1960s before they reached 40. Continue reading

The democratic lesson of Donald Trump

 

103666044-rtx2aqxh-530x298Donald Trump’s shocking win in the US election is a victory for the democratic process and a catastrophe for the human race.

As Brexit showed, having a vote offers a unique opportunity for the middle-mass of common men and women to express a collective ‘fuck you’ to the establishment. In so doing, they make a mockery of media pundits, self-appointed experts and pollsters.

The gospel according to The Clash in ‘Know Your Rights‘ reads : “You have the right to free speech as long as you’re not dumb enough to actually try it”.  With the option to have your voice heard being notoriously limited, the ballot box can be used as a weapon – one of the few ways in which the ordinary citizen can ‘speak’ his or her mind. Continue reading

Jo_CoxThis is a blog post in defence of a tweet I wrote this morning which read as follows:  “In honour of Jo Cox & in opposition to the haters & racists, Brits must vote remain on 23/6″

In an excellent article in The Guardian, Polly Toynbee wrote of the “corrosive” anger aroused by the forthcoming referendum on whether Britain remains or leaves the EU.The venomous reaction to my tweet could be construed as evidence of this. Here are a sample of the numerous comments I received:

  • You really are despicable – exploiting her death for political gain
  • Your comment is absolutely disgraceful and shames the Remain campaign
  • You are a heartless, opportunistic ghoul.
  • Shit for brains.

I stand by what I wrote but feel motivated to explain / defend myself beyond the 140 character limit. Continue reading

I’M NOT RACIST BUT…….

I like this cartoon by American artist Natalie Nourigat

notracistbut