“Historically, African-American cinema has always had a profound relationship to the social issues that our community faced – and for every Ice Cube and Tyler Perry, for every Will Smith and Spike Lee, there were pioneers who paved the way and set the tone for a new vision of African-American cinema that made space for them to exist.” Paul D Moody aka DJ Spooky
Initially issued by Kino Lorber in the US, the BFI have
now released this mind-boggling collection in the UK and nothing will ever be
quite the same again: digital
restorations of over a dozen feature films along with a welter of shorts,
fragments, trailers, documentary footage, archival interviews and audio
recordings...
Contemporary narratives about the “birth of cinema” tend
to focus on the same old names from Griffith, De Mille and, yes, Lois Weber, but to these we must add, at least, Oscar Micheaux not out of
tokenist regard but because, as film historian Charles Musser posits he was one
of the key directors full stop.
There are a whole host of socio-economic reasons why Oscar’s
films were different… but there are similarities between his films and other directors
on show in this magnificent set: all addressed the situation of race in
society. Even white directors such as Frank Peregini and Richard E. Norman directing
all back or mixed casts with stories directed at people who
simply wanted to see their concerns portrayed accurately on screen.
Harry Henderson |
As with so much from a century ago the themes remain
startlingly consistent with today: we shouldn’t kid ourselves that distance
necessarily equals progress. Styles change and these films are a mixed bag in
terms of quality but they are all fascinating and they are all relevant,
opening up new views on cinema and society.
In the introduction, film historian Jacqueline Najuma
Stewart, talks about how black film makers showed an “intimacy” underneath the
Hollywood-influenced main narrative… connecting with their audience in a way
only they would fully understand: smuggling meaning based on shared experience.
There is an important
documentary element with the films covering some of the thousands of local
artistes in theatres across America who otherwise would have been forgotten.
But, more than this, these films show a way of life: real characters with
shades of grey and none of DW’s shoking boot polish.
Lawrence Chenault |
Micheaux is hard to judge by the standards of other
film-makers – he trod his own path and his films are rich, densely-woven and
quite distinctive with a rough-hewn quality defined by his one-take approach
and budget constraints.
He dominates this set with the inclusion of his most famous
duo through to his talkies in the 1930s with five features and two shorts. But
it is his silent work that is most intriguing and it’s interesting to compare
the Symbol of the Unconquered: A Story of
the Ku Klux Klan (1920) not only with Within Our Gates (reviewed earlier
this month here) but with Griffith’s “heroes”.
Fascist criminals just love dressing up and waving torches |
In Symbol we
can see Micheaux as the anti-Griffith with a KKK loosely disguised as The
Knights of the Black Cross who are motivated by criminal greed rather than just
bigotry and racial hatred… They are enlisted by the film’s bad guys in an
attempt to rob our hero of his rightful oil-rich land. The greys are in
evidence with running themes concerning the mixed race of two key characters:
Evon (Iris Hall) is so pale-skinned that her would be suitor, brave
frontiersman Hugh Van Allen (Walker Thompson) won’t make a move as he thinks
she’s white. Meanwhile hotelier, turned horse thief, turned swindler Jefferson
Driscoll (Lawrence Chenault) hates the fact that he is half-black and turns
against his own lineage.
Lean on me: Walker Thompson and Iris Hall |
It’s incomplete but still features a shed-load of ideas
and a dizzying climax in which everything comes together in spite of the
Knights – the community stands tall against their horses, torches and silly
sheets.
Oscar aside, the real triumph of this box set is in
revealing the depth and range of black American cinema through these years:
from comedy shorts from the 1910s to the documentary work of Zora Neale Hurston.
Captain Billy Stokes and his very able one-legged pal, "Peg"! |
I
particularly liked The Flying Ace
(1928) directed by Richard E. Norman a white writer and director who worked
with well-known black stage stars. In this undemanding feature… split into four
chapters to allow screening as a serial, three dastardly crooks – including a
local policeman – rob the rail payroll and frame the station master. Luckily air
ace Captain Billy Stokes (Laurence Criner) is on hand to help the old man’s
daughter (Kathryn Boyd) confound the criminals with the aid of his remarkable one-legged pal "Peg" (Steve Reynolds, who steals the show!).
Kathryn Boyd |
Most race films were a collaboration between white
producers/directors and black actors and Ten
Nights in a Bar Room (1926) is the earliest surviving film from David
Starkman’s Colored Players of Philidelphia. It features an outstanding
performance from Charles Gilpin who was considered – according to Musser – the leading
black actor of the 20s. Gilpin plays Joe Morgan a man cheated by his former business
partner, Simon Slade (Lawrence Chenault) in a story told through a flashback
framing sequence.
Based on the novel from 1854 the film boasts many passing
characters and a moral arc you’d expect but it’s well played and hits pretty
hard.
Charles Gilpin |
The Scar of Shame
(1929) directed by Italian Frank Peregini features a largely black cast led by
the radiant Lucia Lynn Moses. It’s gritty stuff and very much in
vogue with gangsters and speakeasies but with deeper themes of injustice and
the impact of environment on opportunity.
Lucia’s character, Louise is the daughter of an alcoholic
and abusive father Spike (William E Petus), she is rescued by aspiring
songwriter Alvin Hillyard (Harry Henderson) who ends up marrying her to protect
her. But Alvin is too ashamed to show his wife to his mother who expects him to
wed someone from their “set” and as the strains show Spike and his brainier
mate, Eddie (a super turn from Norman Johnstone) try to lure Lucia away. Guns are
drawn and Lucia gets shot in the throat – scarred – whilst Alvin takes the rap
and goes to prison.
Lucia Lynn Moses |
Years later Lucia is working Eddie’s nightclub and
re-encounters Alvin, who has now escaped and built a new life for himself: can
they overcome their environment?
The New York
Amsterdam News reviewer felt that the film “…set a new standard of excellence for picture features with coloured
talent.” This was certainly the aim of the producers, and this film is one
of the most technically accomplished on the set, but the greater technical
demands of talkies, coupled with the Depression, would make it much harder for
race films to compete.
Norman Johnstone |
The variable output of the talkies on this set proves
this point: with Dirty Girtie from Harlem
USA (1946) a case in point. Francine Everette is the film’s stand-out as
the eponymous Girtie – flirty more than dirty - and out-acts a mixed-ability
group of performers in this low-budget effort from director Spencer Williams.
Williams’ earlier film, The Blood of
Jesus (1941), is a much more coherent effort.
Highly polished or dirty there’s much to entertain on
this set and I couldn’t recommend it highly enough. But you need time and... I've barely scratched the surface here: so much to see.
Francine Everette: if only the rets of the film was quite as good as this still... |
Pioneers of African-American Cinema is available now direct from the BFI or other retailers. Every home should have one: a
vital re-balance has been made of cinema history and it is good that these old
voices can be heard again.
Body and Soul is being screened at the BFI on Monday 5th December - a World premier of a new score from jazz composer Peter Edwards and performed live with the Nu Civilisation Orchestra Ensemble: I will be there!
Body and Soul is being screened at the BFI on Monday 5th December - a World premier of a new score from jazz composer Peter Edwards and performed live with the Nu Civilisation Orchestra Ensemble: I will be there!