‘I Am Not Your Negro’ is radical and of the moment

People gathering at the Lincoln Memorial for the March on Washington, featured in the film, “I Am Not Your Negro”

Somewhat deep into the searing and utterly necessary documentary “I Am Not Your Negro”, director Raoul Peck overlays audio from a 1960 U.S. Government film “The Land We Love,” in which the narrator extols the virtues of America and the freedoms afforded all citizens, with images from the 1965 Watts Riots. While the juxtaposition might not be a revolutionary technique to convey incongruities, in this film it captures the sum of the essential American hypocrisy: Black people suffer while the white people play.

Peck’s restraint to build to and save that gut punch for a moment when he’s certain the audience can comprehend not just the images but the ideas behind it, is a testament to the studied excellence of the film. It is not only a must see, but one that should be studied and absorbed over many viewings.

“I Am Not Your Negro” is inspired and informed by “Remember This House,” an unfinished manuscript by James Baldwin in which he aspired to tell the story of America through the death of three friends — Medgar Evers, Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. Baldwin had written only 30 pages before his own death in 1987.

Peck uses Baldwin’s words (read by Samuel L. Jackson) from “Remember This House” and archival footage of various speeches and interviews to create an urgent narrative of race in America that encompasses past and present. Baldwin was writing and speaking about his time, his friends and their moment, but his ideas and truths transcend the specificity of the 1960s. It makes sense when Peck fast-forwards to images of Tamir Rice, Trayvon Martin and Amir Brooks, or headlines about mass shootings.

James Baldwin (center) in “I Am Not Your Negro”

“History is not the past, it’s the present,” Jackson says for Baldwin. “We are our history.”

Using Baldwin’s words and ideas as a guide, Peck seamlessly connects segregation, civil rights and Black Lives Matter while also offering a radical and undeniable indictment of the way in which media can poison a populace, whether through the distractions of mindless reality television or the not-so-subtle othering of black people in films that made Baldwin feel “outside the system of reality.”

“I Am Not Your Negro” being a film makes Baldwin’s criticisms of the medium even more powerful. We get to see the terrified black janitor being told by police that, justly or not, he will likely be accused of raping and murdering a local girl in “They Won’t Forget,” or a light-skinned girl (Dorothy Black) getting “exposed” as black to her white classmates when her mother (Louise Beavers) comes to pick her up from school in John M. Stahl’s “Imitation of Life.”

But perhaps some of the most powerful moments come just from watching Baldwin himself — so eloquent and perceptive and so misunderstood by those around him — whether speaking to Dick Cavett on national television or standing in the front of a banquet hall. His eyes get wide and large with urgency as he explains his ideas. His forehead crinkles when someone else tries to tell him he’s got his own experience wrong.

Baldwin’s words, Jackson’s reading and Peck’s elegant and scorching composition will resonate for years to come. Lindsey Bahr, AP

“I Am Not Your Negro,” a Magnolia Pictures release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for “disturbing violent images, thematic material, language and brief nudity.” Running time: 95 minutes.

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