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Thursday, 22 January 2015

''Selma''

Oscar Snub For It's Director, Ava DuVernay


Another person who didn't make the cut for an Oscar this year was Ava DuVernay, the Director of 'Selma'.
''Maybe the Academy just didn’t think she was one of the five best directors of 2014. If true, she’d be in great company: David Fincher (Gone Girl), Christopher Nolan (Interstellar), and Clint Eastwood (American Sniper) didn’t make the cut this year either. ''*
Personally I think the Oscar Academy Panel are more embarrassed by DuVernay's frank and blistering naked portrayal of modern day racism in America than the denial of her skills as a great director – which are unquestionable.
It's a powerful and compelling film. If you are interested in justice, civil rights and the dignity of those impoverished and dispossessed, it's a must to watch.
The film is about the golden quest of the African-American population for justice and civil rights, the role of Martin Luther King, Jr. and all those unnamed and unknown civil rights supporters and activists whom together made a difference to the course of history.
It is about a local issue in an Alabama town (Selma) which had profound national and international implications. [In an eerily similar way that Ferguson, Missouri, will, historically, demonstrate to have been decades henceforth.]
In reality, with Southern and Mid-West States applying voter identification laws to disenfranchise poor Whites, Hispanics, Latinos, Chicanos, it's a damning indictment of racist voter gerrymandering which is widespread to this very day in the form of modern equivalent of Slavery Laws barring minorities from exercising their right to vote – by creating loops and hoops which make it impossible for the poor and dispossessed to comply with.   DuVernay's portrayal of how the historical blunt application of racism prevented African-Americans from exercising their civil rights and by implication, the subtleties of racism which continue with a vengeance today, were, in my view, too much for the Oscar Nominations Panel to digest.
It's a sickening portrayal of hypocrisy and put Thomas Jefferson's famous statement
''We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness '' on trial in the year 2014 - since evidently these principles are not shared by voter suppressionists who are making a comeback today in several Southern and some Mid-Western States.
A whole industry of disenfranchisement is growing up in America – and a growing tsunami of like-minded Americans are finally taking up the challenge to defend justice liberty and voting rights for all it's citizens.
In view of the above, it's no surprise that the Oscar Academy Awards Panel has shelved DuVernay – but her genius will outlive the Panel – probably to be posthumously awarded her rightful title – when all Americans finally arrives at the promised land: - ''Land of the Free and The Home of The Brave.''

[The "right to vote" is not explicitly stated in the U.S. Constitution except in the above referenced amendments, and only in reference to the fact that the franchise cannot be denied or abridged based solely on the aforementioned qualifications. In other words, the "right to vote" is perhaps better understood, in layman's terms, as only prohibiting certain forms of legal discrimination in establishing qualifications for suffrage. States may deny the "right to vote" for other reasons.
For example, many states require eligible citizens to register to vote a set number of days prior to the election in order to vote. More controversial restrictions include those laws that prohibit convicted felons from voting or, as seen in Bush v. Gore, disputes as to what rules should apply in counting or recounting ballots.[5]**]


I could walk you through the movie.   From the racist firebombing of a Christian Church to voter suppression and rejection, to the role of LBJ (which I have always said, and stand on record for saying ,40 years ago, was undervalued) but it's much better that you judge the film for yourself and you decide what side of the tracks you are on.
I would say that the role of J. Edgar Hoover has, in my opinion, been misrepresented.   He was a bit of a tyrant but he was also a patriot – and a fair patriot – if that makes any sense?

Ironically I think that DuVernay and Eastwood have a lot in common as 'no compromise' 'raw flesh' 'tell it as it is' directors of the human condition.
It would be a powerful combination to see both collaborate on a movie.
But sadly, this will never happen.

A film you must see - or miss a priceless piece of American history - in it's most honest portrayal.


©Patrick Emek, 2015



''Selma'' Directed by Ava DuVernay







The Daily Show (Jon Stewart) with Eva DuVernay
or if you are in the U.K.




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