Politically Correct Liberals Awared Best Picture to Black Movie
The Carpetbagger
'I'd Never Seen My Fears as an African-American Man Onscreen'
Jordan Peele, writer-director of "Get Out," says his own concerns almost prevented it from being made. Now prize givers love it. Will the academy agree?
Jordan Peele said he worried that the themes of white villainy and black victimization of "Get Out" would draw protests. Credit... Andrew White for The New York Times
"Get Out," the box office smash and awards season honey, almost didn't get made, because its writer and director Jordan Peele figured it couldn't happen.
The broad strokes of the story line — white girl brings black boyfriend home to meet her family — evoked "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner," but with a crucial and sinister twist (spoilers ensue): The boyfriend's suspicions about the white folks having it in for him become increasingly, and terrifyingly, justified.
Mr. Peele, 38, is known for his subversive comedy sketch show with Keegan-Michael Key, and had never before seen a movie like the one he desperately wanted to make. But he worried that its themes of white villainy and black victimization would keep people away in droves. Also, being biracial, he felt discouraged by the lack of people of color in the industry.
"I didn't have enough role models telling me this movie could be made," Mr. Peele said during a chat in mid-November at the Whitby Hotel in Manhattan, a few months before he would become a three-time Oscar nominee (for writing, directing and producing the movie). "But to me, it was the missing piece of the conversation. I'd never seen my fears as an African-American man onscreen in this way."
Around 2014, five years after he first began kicking the idea around, Mr. Peele started working on a script and brought it up with the producer Sean McKittrick ("Donnie Darko"), hedging all the way. He recalled telling Mr. McKittrick that it was his favorite movie that had never been made, and probably would never get made, and that he understood why. But Mr. McKittrick surprised Mr. Peele by telling him that he was on board.
Three years later, in February 2017, the movie opened just as the racist ugliness attending the election of Donald J. Trump dashed lingering Obama-era delusions that America was a post-racial place. And Mr. Peele's worries about the movie's reception were knocked down like pins.
Mr. Peele had fretted that the film's skewering of white people might set off boycotts, but instead "Get Out" proved to be medicine that audiences didn't realize they needed, and worldwide they made a $254 million hit out of Mr. Peele's $4.5 million dream. (He believes there might have been protests had the film taken aim at white conservatives rather than white liberals.)
Now, to Mr. Peele's delight and surprise, Hollywood prize givers are showering the movie with love.
At the Gotham Awards, Mr. Peele won best breakthrough director, best screenplay and the audience award. The National Board of Review named the film best ensemble picture and one of the year's Top 10, while Mr. Peele took best directorial debut. The New York Film Critics Circle awarded it best first film. The Los Angeles Film Critics Association named it best screenplay.
Still, the fact that "Get Out" did not win the top awards left some die-hard fans dissatisfied, including Julia Turner, the editor in chief of Slate, who is anxious that Oscar voters may not give the film what she sees as its due. "'Get Out' is 2017's best picture, and it should be 2017's Best Picture," she wrote. "When was the last time a popular cinematic masterpiece had something important and topical to say about the world?"
Either way, this kind of awards attention is unusual for a picture that could easily be pigeonholed as comedy or horror, genres that have a history of falling flat with the august members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
There have been exceptions, among them Natalie Portman's best actress win for "Black Swan" (2010), Kathy Bates's similar win for the 1990 "Misery," and, most prodigiously, "The Silence of the Lambs" (1991), which swept up five Oscars — best picture, director, actor, actress and adapted screenplay.
Yet over all, scary or scary-ish movies that manage to land Oscar nominations tend to win in categories like best makeup or costume, if they win at all. Though it is still early in the awards race, "Get Out" is projected to earn Oscar nominations for best picture, best screenplay, and possibly best director and best editing, along with a few Golden Globes nominations, which are due next week. The academy is also increasingly diverse, and nominations for "Get Out," along with "Mudbound," among other contenders, would be a bulwark against an embarrassing repeat of #OscarsSoWhite.
Universal Studios submitted "Get Out" in the Globes' best comedy or musical category, kicking off an internet kerfuffle, with critics saying "comedy" minimized the film's critique of racism. The Carpetbagger has heard arguments backing the decision: "Funny" was the first word of the film's synopsis on Rotten Tomatoes, and hackles might not have been raised had the category been "satire" instead. Mr. Peele responded to the fracas with a tweet, "'Get Out' is a documentary," though all along he has called it a "social thriller," a category that he says includes "The Stepford Wives" and "Rosemary's Baby," where society and humanity are the monsters.
He is also in full awards-campaign mode. He shares the cover of Vanity Fair's special Awards Extra! print issue with Greta Gerwig ("Lady Bird") and was featured in The Hollywood Reporter's Writer Roundtable. When he met to chat with the Carpetbagger, he was plowing through a full schedule of media interviews, and the Bagger was whooshed away after 50 minutes because another reporter had arrived.
The whirlwind of it all seems to have left Mr. Peele a little stunned. (It's also taken him away from his wife, the comedian Chelsea Peretti, and their infant son.) "This is crazy," he said, while collecting one of his prizes last week at the Gothams. During our interview, he spoke deliberately and carefully, giving off the sense that he might at any moment be, as it were, woken up. "It's all kind of a 'pinch me' thing," he said.
Of course, Mr. Peele is finding the fuss deeply gratifying, not least because "Get Out" was cathartic for him, a mirror of the micro-aggressions he'd long experienced, as well as his fears. Among them, he said, are "the fear of being viewed as your race but not as a human being. The fears of abandoning your roots and stepping out of your blackness to, say, date someone of a different race. The fears of your own neglect of your race."
Mr. Peele grew up in Manhattan, the son of a white mother and a black father who, Mr. Peele said, pretty much disappeared from his life when he was about 7. From an early age, Mr. Peele said, he was fixated on race, largely because his was constantly being reflected back to him.
Other kids could not believe his mother was white, he said. As a youngster who attended the prestigious Calhoun School, he found himself being harassed by the police, unbidden. On standardized tests, unsure which race he belonged to, he'd check off "other."
"In some ways you feel like an insider of both sides, but in many ways you feel like an 'other,'" Mr. Peele said. "Obviously I am obsessed with the idea of race because my road has not been as clear as some."
He channeled his anxieties and observations into "Key & Peele's" satirical and parodic sketches, finding comedy in unfunny subjects like slavery and police brutality. In "Get Out," the target was the hypocrisies of smug white liberalism, embodied in the white father who declares that he would have voted for Obama three times, all the while plotting to implant Daniel Kaluuya's character with a white person's brain.
"I think everybody, even white liberals — especially white liberals — appreciate exposing the dark side of what we think is the most politically correct type of white person," Mr. Peele said. Another part of the appeal for white viewers, he guessed, is being allowed a window into what it might be like to be black in white America. "You're never going to get closer to being a black person than watching a black movie with a black protagonist," he said.
Come what may March 4, the night of the Academy Awards, Mr. Peele can take comfort in knowing that he already won. "Get Out" opened the Friday before last season's Oscars, and while the ceremony was hurt by a best picture snafu and low ratings, "Get Out" was on its way to breaking box office records.
Politically Correct Liberals Awared Best Picture to Black Movie
Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/06/movies/jordan-peele-get-out-african-american-biracial.html
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