Showing posts with label documentaries are the best. Show all posts
Showing posts with label documentaries are the best. Show all posts

Monday, January 25, 2010

'Waiting for Superman'...lemme vent right quick, and GO!

Davis Guggenheim (above), Geoff Canada in 'Waiting for Superman' (below)


I'm not this cynical all the time.

I promise.

It's just more often than not I'm moved to the keyboard when I'm irritated and irked.
So here I am. Irritated and irked.

The first acquisition of the annual big deal over yonder in Park City, Utah is 'Waiting for Superman', Paramount Vantage's proud purchase. Brought to you by the same guy that helped Al Gore infuse sexy into eco-consciousness and the still hotly-debated climate change crisis.

Davis Guggenheim, director of 'An Inconvenient Truth', helms the doc that I daresay, has brought all of the big guns out to Sundance Film Festival.

Michelle Rhee ova dere. (Chancellor of DC Public Schools)
Bill Gates ova dere. (Gates Millennium Foundation)
And oh. Geoff Canada (Harlem Children's Zone) is but one face that lights up the doc itself (I am a big fan of his).

I'm not knocking anybody's approach to unscrew-up the hot mess that is this NCLB mire--and in fact, am happy to salute Guggenheim for doing what no one else has done to this point:

Bring it up.
In a major way.
Through a major medium.

He surely won't settle it. I can tell from the 2 minute bit he did with Sundance about the film itself. But the first word never does.

In fact, I predict this documentary will avert its eyes to the REAL roots of American public education's failure. And I predict it will only further propagate the gospel of the so-called cool kids in education 'reform,' minimize the debates to a two-sided something or other about why we should praise the good we see for implementing a Charter structure and blame the bad on 'bad teaching' and unionization.

But I can tell you right now, boo.
Dis ain gon be de las word u seen on de matta.
Trust.

Can't wait til this opens in D.C.
POST SCRIPT
Read this after I posted: Washington City Paper's Arts Roundup for 1/25/10 quips, "Methinks not everyone in town will be lining up to see Waiting for Superman at E Street Cinema a few months from now."

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Night Watch: Keke Palmer as Roxanne Shante...

While we're on the topic of documentaries and Roxanne Shante...


Keke Palmer--of 'Akeelah and the Bee' and (new-school) Nickelodeon fame, has been set to star as the legendary femcee since 2007.

Still waiting.

Rumor has it that financing is what has been slowing the presses. <*eyeroll...> Isn't it always... <*grinding teeth...>


Will definitely be keeping watch for any new developments on that front. But if anybody manages to reach a breakthrough, go speed that Nina Simone biopic up, too. Another tease that's been on the backburner for the last half of the aughts. Mary J. Blige had been named the actress-to-be in that pic for MTV FILMS, NO LESS, but something tells me that until we see some Black, Brown and green teeth behind it, we'll be waiting.







Vintage Is The Nu-Nu


The most memorable moment in 80 Blocks From Tiffany’s has got to be when community organizer, Ms. Joan breaks up a would-be scrap on the corners of late 1970s South Bronx. She takes the DJ’s mic and admonishes the block party crowd—rimmed with ‘hood leaders and the ghetto’s most prone to NYPD hyper-surveillance.


The street corridors quiet down in reverence when they see her approach the booth—a respect most of the cops sidling up and down the street could only wish for (with or without heat). Seeing that the crowd is waiting for her gentle rebuke to grace the sound system, she finally speaks—and in the tone they expect and feel they deserve from a Mother:

“Freak! Now I mean, freak! We came here to party, hear??”

She breaks her sternness with a smile, the two so-called gangsters she broke up agree to fight tomorrow, and the DJ cranks again.

Now that’s “vintage.”


And that’s what birthed hip hop as we know it. In the midst of a community that had been hollowed out by the disappearance of jobs (check), displacement of Black and Brown neighborhoods (check), imminent reign of Reagan (comparable enough to a recent departure of Bush, and who knowwwwws what Empire has in store next—check), and can suddenly be relegated to the shadows of an ice blue Tiffany’s kind of demographic that didn’t—couldn’t—exist or expect to only a few short years before…(check, but insert Starbucks here)



A culture emerged that quenched the thirst for rebellion.

And I hope the point is made: we could use a sort of revival.

Within the last decade, folks mourned and beat the horse past dead about Hip Hop’s fate. More than anything, what undergirded these discussions was a longing—not just for content that would nourish the aught-sick soul (riddled with degradation and commercial compromise) but for Movement that would protect that space where we can “freak” and let our minds be free (in the midst of social turbulence and chaos).

So it’s not such a terrible thing that SNL'er (yes) Gary Weis couldn’t churn the 80 Blocks doc out sooner en masse than October 2009. He made it in ’79 alongside Jon Bradshaw and George Van Noy under the tag Togg Films, Above Average and Late Nite Productions.

His intention was to cover (we hope not fetishize) 'gang life' in BX with, it seems, a cursory glance at how tagging, emceeing, and deejaying threaded through (3 of 5). But you’d be wise to check it out.

Perhaps one of only a few glimpses we can get to guide us through the Palindrome mirror: RETWEET: Past and Future are but mirrors of the present moment. Live today as you would have it reflected through all time.

Where do we go from here, Hip Hop?

How do we shelter the people and stay awake just the same?
All the answers we could ever want are staring us down our backs. Sankofa.

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