RegardezLe loup de Wall Street en ligne maintenant. Le film Le loup de Wall Street est actuellement disponible sur Google Play, Apple TV, Netflix, Sky Show, Sky Store. Jordan Belfort, jeune homme pas encore sec derrière les oreilles, débarque à Wall Street dans le but de faire carrière dans la finance. Licencié suite au terrible crash du 19 octobre 1987, il retrouve
Movie ReviewThe Blood and Tears, Not the MagnoliasVideoSteve McQueen, the director of “12 Years a Slave,” narrates a sequence from his Years a SlaveNYT Critic's PickDirected by Steve McQueenBiography, Drama, HistoryR2h 14mOct. 17, 2013“12 Years a Slave” isn’t the first movie about slavery in the United States — but it may be the one that finally makes it impossible for American cinema to continue to sell the ugly lies it’s been hawking for more than a century. Written by John Ridley and directed by Steve McQueen, it tells the true story of Solomon Northup, an African-American freeman who, in 1841, was snatched off the streets of Washington, and sold. It’s at once a familiar, utterly strange and deeply American story in which the period trappings long beloved by Hollywood — the paternalistic gentry with their pretty plantations, their genteel manners and all the fiddle-dee-dee rest — are the backdrop for an story opens with Solomon Chiwetel Ejiofor already enslaved and cutting sugar cane on a plantation. A series of flashbacks shifts the story to an earlier time, when Solomon, living in New York with his wife and children, accepts a job from a pair of white men to play violin in a circus. Soon the three are enjoying a civilized night out in Washington, sealing their camaraderie with heaping plates of food, flowing wine and the unstated conviction — if only on Solomon’s part — of a shared humanity, a fiction that evaporates when he wakes the next morning shackled and discovers that he’s been sold. Thereafter, he is passed from master to a desperate path and a story that seizes you almost immediately with a visceral force. But Mr. McQueen keeps everything moving so fluidly and efficiently that you’re too busy worrying about Solomon, following him as he travels from auction house to plantation, to linger long in the emotions and ideas that the movie churns up. Part of this is pragmatic — Mr. McQueen wants to keep you in your seat, not force you out of the theater, sobbing — but there’s something else at work here. This is, he insists, a story about Solomon, who may represent an entire subjugated people and, by extension, the peculiar institution, as well as the American past and present. Yet this is also, emphatically, the story of one Duhamel/Fox Searchlight PicturesUnlike most of the enslaved people whose fate he shared for a dozen years, the real Northup was born into freedom. His memoir’s telegraphing subtitle is “Narrative of Solomon Northup, a Citizen of New-York, Kidnapped in Washington City in 1841, and Rescued in 1853, From a Cotton Plantation Near the Red River, in Louisiana.” That made him an exceptional historical witness, because even while he was inside slavery — physically, psychologically, emotionally — part of him remained intellectually and culturally at a remove, which gives his book a powerful double perspective. In the North, he experienced some of the privileges of whiteness, and while he couldn’t vote, he could enjoy an outing with his family. Even so, he was still a black man in antebellum McQueen is a British visual artist who made a rough transition to movie directing with his first two features, “Hunger” and “Shame,” both of which were embalmed in self-promoting visuals. “Hunger” is the sort of art film that makes a show of just how perfectly its protagonist, the Irish dissident Bobby Sands Michael Fassbender, smears his excrement on a prison wall. “Shame,” about a sex addict Mr. Fassbender again, was little more than glossy surfaces, canned misery and preening directorial virtuosity. For “12 Years a Slave,” by contrast, Mr. McQueen has largely dispensed with the conventions of art cinema to make something close to a classical narrative; in this movie, the emphasis isn’t on visual style but on Solomon and his unmistakable desire for nothing ambivalent about Solomon. Mr. Ejiofor has a round, softly inviting face, and he initially plays the character with the stunned bewilderment of a man who, even chained, can’t believe what is happening to him. Not long after he’s kidnapped, Solomon sits huddled with two other prisoners on a slaver’s boat headed south. One man insists that they should fight their crew. A second disagrees, saying, “Survival’s not about certain death, it’s about keeping your head down.” Seated between them, Solomon shakes his head no. Days earlier he was home. “Now,” he says, “you tell me all is lost?” For him, mere survival cannot be enough. “I want to live.”This is Solomon’s own declaration of independence, and an assertion of his humanity that sustains him. It’s also a seamlessly structured scene that turns a discussion about the choices facing enslaved people — fight, submit, live — into cinema. In large part, “12 Years a Slave” is an argument about American slavery that, in image after image, both reveals it as a system signified in one scene by the sights and ominous, mechanical sounds of a boat water wheel and demolishes its canards, myths and cherished symbols. There are no lovable masters here or cheerful slaves. There are also no messages, wagging fingers or final-act summations or sermons. Mr. McQueen’s method is more effective and subversive because of its primarily old-fashioned, Hollywood-style a brilliant strategy that recognizes the seductions of movies that draw you wholly into their narratives and that finds Mr. McQueen appropriating the very film language that has been historically used to perpetuate reassuring to some fabrications about American history. One of the shocks of “12 Years a Slave” is that it reminds you how infrequently stories about slavery have been told on the big screen, which is why it’s easy to name exceptions, like Richard Fleischer’s demented, at times dazzling 1975 film, “Mandingo.” The greater jolt, though, is that “12 Years a Slave” isn’t about another Scarlett O’Hara, but about a man who could be one of those anonymous, bent-over black bodies hoeing fields in the opening credits of “Gone With the Wind,” a very different “story of the Old South.”VideoThe Times critic Manohla Dargis reviews "12 Years a Slave."At one point in Northup’s memoir, which was published a year after “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and eight years before the start of the Civil War, he interrupts an account of his own near-lynching to comment on the man largely to blame for the noose around his neck. “But whatever motive may have governed the cowardly and malignant tyrant,” he writes, “it is of no importance.” It doesn’t matter why Northup was strung up in a tree like a dead deer in the summer sun, bathed in sweat, with little water to drink. What matters is what has often been missing among the economic, social and cultural explanations of American slavery and in many of its representations human suffering. “My wrists and ankles, and the cords of my legs and arms began to swell, burying the rope that bound them into the swollen flesh.”Part of the significance of Northup’s memoir is its description of everyday life. Mr. McQueen recreates, with texture and sweep, scenes of slavery’s extreme privations and cruelties, but also its work rhythms and routines, sunup to sundown, along with the unsettling intimacies it produced among the owners and the owned. In Louisiana, Solomon is sold by a brutish trader Paul Giamatti to an outwardly decent plantation owner, William Ford Benedict Cumberbatch, who, in turn, sells him to a madman and drunk, Edwin Epps Mr. Fassbender. In his memoir, Northup refers to Ford charitably, doubtless for the benefit of the white readers who were the target of his abolitionist appeal. Freed from that burden, the filmmakers can instead show the hypocrisies of such on Epps’s plantation that “12 Years a Slave” deepens, and then hardens. It’s also where the existential reality of what it meant to be enslaved, hour after hour, decade after decade, generation after generation, is laid bare, at times on the flayed backs of Epps’s human property, including that of his brutalized favorite, Patsey Lupita Nyong’o. Mr. Fassbender, skittish and weirdly spiderlike, grabs your attention with curdled intensity. He’s so arresting that at first it seems as if the performance will soon slip out of Mr. McQueen’s control, and that the character will become just another irresistibly watchable, flamboyant heavy. Movie villainy is so easy, partly because it allows actors to showboat, but also because a lot of filmmakers can’t resist siding with McQueen’s sympathies are as unqualified as his control. There is much to admire about “12 Years a Slave,” including the cleareyed, unsentimental quality of its images — this is a place where trees hang with beautiful moss and black bodies — and how Mr. Ejiofor’s restrained, open, translucent performance works as a ballast, something to cling onto, especially during the frenzies of violence. These are rightly hard to watch and bring to mind the startling moment in “Maus,” Art Spiegelman’s cartoon opus about the Holocaust, in which he asks his “shrink” to explain what it felt like to be in Auschwitz. “Boo! It felt like that. But ALWAYS!” The genius of “12 Years a Slave” is its insistence on banal evil, and on terror, that seeped into souls, bound bodies and reaped an enduring, terrible price.“12 Years a Slave” is rated R Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. Slave-trade violence.
Watch12 Years a Slave on DIRECTV. In the years before the Civil War, Solomon Northup (Chiwetel Ejiofor), a free black man from upstate New York, is kidnapped and sold into slavery in the South. Subjected to the cruelty of one malevolent owner (Michael Fassbender), he also finds unexpected kindness from another, as he struggles continually to survive and maintain some of his dignity.
h 14 min2013X-Ray16+12 YEARS A SLAVE is based on an incredible true story of one man's fight for survival and freedom. In the pre-Civil War United States, Solomon Northup, a free black man from upstate New York, is abducted and sold into slavery. Facing cruelty personified by a malevolent slave owner as well as unexpected kindnesses, Solomon struggles not only to stay alive, but to retain his video is currently unavailableto watch in your locationWatch TrailerWatch TrailerAdd to Watchlist
12Years a Slave Blu-ray. Steve McQueen (réalisateur) Avec Benedict Cumberbatch, Brad Pitt, Chiwetel Ejiofor fnac+. A New York au début des années 1840, un Afro-Américain, père de famille, est enlevé puis vendu comme esclave pour travailler dans les champs de coton.
12 Years a Slave Drama 2014 2 hr 14 min iTunes 12 Years A Slave is based on an incredible true story of one man's fight for survival and freedom. In the pre-Civil War United States, Solomon Northup Chiwetel Ejiofor, a free black man from upstate New York, is abducted and sold into slavery. Facing cruelty personified by a malevolent slave owner, portrayed by Michael Fassbender as well as unexpected kindnesses, Solomon struggles not only to stay alive, but to retain his dignity. In the twelfth year of his unforgettable odyssey, Solomon’s chance meeting with a Canadian abolitionist Brad Pitt forever alters his life. Drama 2014 2 hr 14 min iTunes 18 Starring Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Lupita Nyong'o Director Steve McQueen Trailers Related Cast & Crew
12Years a Slave, un film de Steve McQueen, Steve McQueen | Synopsis : Les États-Unis, quelques années avant la guerre de Sécession. Solomon Northup, jeune homme noir originaire de l’État de
Home Movie News '12 Years a Slave' The Movie vs. The True Story Steve McQueen's '12 Years a Slave' is generating buzz, but does it examine American Slavery as well as Solomon Northup's original memoir? Read our breakdown. There's no doubt that Oscar nominations and possibly some wins lie ahead for director Steven McQueen's acclaimed drama, 12 Years a Slave. The film is based on the memoir written by Solomon Northup, which reveals what happened after Solomon played by Chiwetel Ejiofor - a free black man living in New York in pre-Civil War America - was kidnapped and sold into slavery, before he was able to regain his freedom more than a decade later. If you've read my review, then you're aware that I'm more lukewarm on the 12 Years a Slave film than many other critics and moviegoers - many of whom have proclaimed that McQueen's adaptation is a masterpiece or, if not quite that perfect, the next best thing. My overriding complaint about the film is that it's an unflinching look at the atrocities committed by American slave owners - but not so much a movie that sheds additional light on how this as the euphemism goes "peculiar institution" worked - and, therefore, feels a bit like "'torture porn' made for arthouse moviegoers." Question is, does Northup's original memoir offer that kind of insight on American slavery? Or does it foremost strive to document the traumatizing events that Solomon bore witness to, even as he struggled to keep himself alive like the 2013 film adaptation? Are the intents of movie and memoir one and the same - or vastly different? It almost goes without saying that you have to allow room for some creative leeway and exaggeration/changes for dramatic effect - something I addressed last year with an examination of the truth vs. fiction in Argo - but my argument here is that those difference between 12 Years a Slave the book and the movie add up in a way that shouldn't be overlooked. - NEXT The Book vs. The Movie [SPOILERS] - Solomon Chiwetel Ejiofor and Tibeats Paul Dano Perhaps the best illustration of what I'm talking about is an important turn of events in 12 Years a Slave, which occurs near the end of the first act/beginning of the second act. Solomon defends himself from a slave handler named Tibeats Paul Dano - who is embarrassed after Solomon has proven himself to be the smarter man - by fighting back and getting the best of his assailant. Tibeats retaliates by gathering his thugs and attempting to hang Solomon, but is stopped at the last moment. However, Solmon is left half-hanging standing on his tip-toes as a punishment, until his Master Ford Benedict Cumberbatch rushes home and cuts him free. Thereafter, Ford is forced to sell Solomon, in order to protect him from Tibeats who still wants his revenge. In real life, these events played out differently. Ford had sold Solomon to Tibeats when, one day, the latter - being described in Solomon's memoir as "even more morose and disagreeable than usual" - unwisely tried to beat his servant in the way that the film portrays. However, the reason Tibeats was stopped from hanging Solomon was because Ford still held a mortgage on him and, therefore, Tibeats had no right to kill Solomon until Ford's debt was settled let that sink in for a moment. Solomon was thereafter left in place tied up and unable to move while exposed to terrible heat from the sun not half-choking, as in the movie, until Ford arrived and set him loose. Solomon even continued to work for Tibeats in the days that followed; though, the latter tended to stay quiet and keep his distance from then on having learned his lesson. Mr. Ford Benedict Cumberbatch and Solomon Chiwetel Ejiofor Mind you, in his memoir Solomon does not skimp on the harsh details where it concerns how exhausting and punishing his experience working for Tibeats was. The thing is, this chapter in 12 Years a Slave the book is a fascinating, yet also simple illustration of how the institution of slavery worked - and just what a deplorable, self-perpetuating machine it was. Even more so, it drives home the reality that slavery - back in the mid-19th century - was seen as being a normal part of everyday life, even by people like Mr. Ford whom, in his memoir, Solomon still admires as a good man and Christian. In the film, however, the highlight of this event is the 1-2 minutes of sickening footage that shows Solomon half-hanging to death. Does it show the brutality of slavery? Absolutely. Does it make a profound statement that helps us in the present to really understand how and why this was allowed to happen and just how much your average non-slave American was culpable in letting it happen? Well... - NEXT List of Differences between Movie & Book... Here are a handful of additional examples, comparing/contrasting scenes from 12 Years a Slave the movie vs. the true story depicted in Northup's memoir In the book, Solomon described a number of incidents that occurred when he was being transported to the Southern like how he and his fellow prisoners planned an Amistad-style revolt, before one of them fell ill and died from smallpox - or, how Solomon encountered a sailor who helped him and wrote a letter to Solomon's friends in the North. However, although you might think the sailor would treat this as his moral responsibility, the way Solomon described it, the sailor regarded what he did for Solomon as a simple favor. By comparison, in the film we see the slaves being harassed, raped and murdered, as one of Solomon's peers advises him to keep his head down. Mr. Epps Michael Fassbender - the man who owned Solomon for nearly a decade - is described in Solomon's memoir as being just as detestable and menacing as he is portrayed in McQueen's film. However, when detailing his interactions with Mr. Epps, Solomon also paints the man as being neurotic, pompous, disillusioned and even bizarrely gratified by Solomon's relentless hard work and polite manner. Similarly, Solomon reveals that - in a twisted way - he formed a personal relationship with Mrs. Epps Sarah Paulson, by doing her many biddings. In fact, Mrs. Epps seems genuinely sad and is moved to tears at having to bid farewell to her beloved slave again, let that sink in, when Solomon is finally rescued. In the film, though, we're only shown how the Epps' tormented and brutalized Solomon along with his fellow slaves out of jealousy, anger and lust. Patsey Lupita Nyong'o and Solomon Chiwetel Ejiofor Solomon, in his memoir, explains that he was empowered to survive his nightmarish ordeal by dwelling on the thoughts of his ancestors, his father, his family, his own personal spiritual beliefs - even by memories of the idle pleasure he got from playing the violin, when he was younger. Likewise, Patesy Lupita Nyong'o - the hard-working slave that is frequently abused by Mr. Epps and a jealous Mrs. Epps - told Solomon how she's inspired to live on by her belief in goodness elsewhere in the world, and dreams of finding her freedom in the Northern In McQueen's film, we get very few details about how Solomon sustained his spirit - save for a scene where he symbolically smashes the violin given to him by Ford does that count? - and we get a scene where Patesy asks Solomon to mercy-kill her. The film 12 Years a Slave skips a very intriguing chapter from Solomon's memoir, where he recounts how Henry B. Northup - a lawyer and the "relative of the family in which my forefathers were thus held to service, and from which they took the name I bear" - was the one contacted by the Canadian Bass Brad Pitt and ended up being responsible for Solomon's rescue. In particular, the story of how Henry had to deal with so much red tape and other government roadblocks - in order to address the crime committed against Solomon - is a highly insightful look at history all its own - one that is as relevant today as ever, with regard to the ongoing conversation about the legacy of slavery and institutionalized racism. The same goes for information and aspects of Solomon's memoir that are excluded or not explored in the movie adaptation, but would've helped to drive home just how real the people and events depicted therein are. Again, it goes without saying that you have to allow some room for artists to change the facts of history as McQueen and Ridley did on 12 Years a Slave, in order to produce an engaging piece of storytelling. However, when you add up the many deviations in McQueen's film - more importantly, how the facts were altered - I would argue that it demonstrates that the movie version of 12 Years a Slave doesn't hold up as the 'statement' about slavery that many people have argued it is. The devil, as they say, is in the details. Instead, McQueen's project is a technically well-made film about a man's quest to survive, which tends to over-indulge in showing the ugliness of slavery. Yet, McQueen's 12 Years a Slave forgoes teaching some of the most important lessons to be gained from looking back at history which are the true reasons we should never forget what happened in the past. Agree? Disagree? Let us know in the comments section and, as always, keep it civil. _____ 12 Years a Slave is now playing in limited release and will continue expanding to more theaters over the forthcoming weeks. To learn more about Solomon Northup, read his original memoir Twelve Years a SlaveNarrative of Solomon Northup, a Citizen of New-York, Kidnapped in Washington City in 1841, and Rescued in 1853 available online here.
Regarder12 Years a Slave Streaming VF (VOSTFR) Gratuit en HD 12 Years a Slave (2013) film Complet en Français vous pouvez profiter en ligne gratuitement et sans inscription en un seul clic. 12 Years a Slave 2013 Film complet streaming VF en ligne gratuit. 12 Years a Slave en Streaming VF . Voir Film 12 Years a Slave en streaming VF gratuitement en Ultra HD sans
Yearning to watch '12 Years a Slave' on your TV or mobile device at home? Tracking down a streaming service to buy, rent, download, or watch the Steve McQueen-directed movie via subscription can be a huge pain, so we here at Moviefone want to take the pressure off. Below, you'll find a number of top-tier streaming and cable services - including rental, purchase, and subscription alternatives - along with the availability of '12 Years a Slave' on each platform when they are available. Now, before we get into the fundamentals of how you can watch '12 Years a Slave' right now, here are some details about the Plan B Entertainment, Regency Enterprises, River Road Entertainment, Film4 Productions, New Regency Pictures drama flick. Released October 30th, 2013, '12 Years a Slave' stars Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender, Lupita Nyong'o, Benedict Cumberbatch The R movie has a runtime of about 2 hr 14 min, and received a user score of 80 out of 100 on TMDb, which collated reviews from 9,757 experienced users. You probably already know what the movie's about, but just in case... Here's the plot "In the pre-Civil War United States, Solomon Northup, a free black man from upstate New York, is abducted and sold into slavery. Facing cruelty as well as unexpected kindnesses Solomon struggles not only to stay alive, but to retain his dignity. In the twelfth year of his unforgettable odyssey, Solomon’s chance meeting with a Canadian abolitionist will forever alter his life." '12 Years a Slave' is currently available to rent, purchase, or stream via subscription on Apple iTunes, DIRECTV, Microsoft Store, Redbox, Google Play Movies, Amazon Video, AMC on Demand, Vudu, Spectrum On Demand, HBO Max, HBO Now, and YouTube .
12Years a Slave en streaming direct et replay sur CANAL+ | myCANAL 12 Years a Slave Film Drame, États-Unis d'Amérique, Royaume-Uni, 2013, 2h14 Voir la bande annonce Peu avant la guerre de Sécession, un jeune Afro-Américain vit à New York avec sa famille, et travaille comme charpentier et violoniste.
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Sorti en 2013, 12 Years a Slave "Douze ans d'esclavage", pour la traduction française, réalisé par Steve McQueen, a connu un important succès critique. Le drame historique revient sur l'histoire vraie de Solomon Northup interprété par Chiwetel Ejiofor, kidnappé et vendu comme esclave en 1841. D'homme libre, charpentier et violoniste vivant près de New York, aux États-Unis, il devient l'esclave de différents propriétaires de la région de La Nouvelle-Orléans. D'abord esclave d'un premier propriétaire de plantations de coton présenté comme aimable et sincère joué par Benedict Cumberbatch, il est ensuite vendu à d'autres hommes, puis à Edwin Epps Michael Fassbender, un homme violent qui sera son tyran pendant dix ans. Dans cette plantation, proche du Mississippi, il cohabitera, entres autres, avec une autre esclave, Patsey Lupita Nyong'o, violée et torturée à répétition par le propriétaire. 12 Years a Slave est diffusé ce lundi 21 juin, sur France 5, à 20h45. L'occasion de voir ou de revoir un film choc et nécessaire. Certains scènes sont d'une violence extrême et confrontent le spectateur à la réalité de l'esclavage. Attention, la scène choisie par Marie Claire intervient à la fin du film. La suite de l'article contient des spoilers, bien que le film soit adapté d'une histoire vraie. "Je m'excuse pour mon apparence" Après douze ans d'esclavage, Solomon Northup est sauvé par la venue du shérif local, accompagné de Mr Parker, ancien commerçant que fréquentait le violoniste avant d'être vendu en tant qu'esclave. Solomon doit répondre à des questions précises sur sa vie d'avant et sa famille pour confirmer son identité. Il est enfin libéré et emmené par le shérif, malgré l'opposition féroce de son propriétaire, qui lui interdit de partir avec "son nègre". Après avoir laissé derrière lui Patsey, Solomo, retrouve sa famille. La scène finale de Twelve Years a Slave montre d'abord l'émotion de Solomon Northop arrivant devant le domicile qu'il n'a pas vu depuis 1841. Il pousse la porte. Face à lui se tiennent sa femme, son fils, sa fille, ainsi que son mari et leur nouveau-né. En s'approchant, l'homme désormais libre livre ses premiers mots, tremblant, les larmes aux yeux "Je m'excuse pour mon apparence. Mais j'ai connu une période difficile ces dernières années." "Margaret, Alonzo", murmure-t-il, en regardant ses enfants, désormais adultes. Je m'excuse pour mon apparence. Mais j'ai connu une période difficile ces dernières années. Sa fille s'avance, également ému, et lui présente son époux, puis son fils "Voici ton petit-fils, Solomon Northup". "Solomon", répond-il. Après douze ans d'esclavage, l'homme, en larmes, comprend que sa famille ne l'a pas oublié. "Pardonne-moi", demande-t-il à sa fille. "Il n'y a rien à pardonner", lui répond-elle avant que l'ensemble de la famille enlace leur proche retrouvé. Le film se conclut sur cette image, expliquant que Solomon Northup a été l'une des rares victimes de kidnapping à avoir retrouvé sa liberté après l'esclavage. Une adaptation de l'histoire vraie de Solomon Northup Twelve Years a Slave est l'adaptation fidèle de l'autobiographie de Solomon Northup, du même nom, publiée l'année de sa libération, en 1853. C'est l'histoire d'un homme noir libre de 32 ans, enlevé de force, kidnappé à Washington, puis vendu comme esclave en Louisiane. Comme dans le récit original, le film retrace douze ans d'esclavage, avec des images difficiles, où femmes et hommes sont réduits en objet et passés de propriétaire en propriétaire. Pendant douze ans, Solomon n'évoque jamais sa vie d'homme livre d'avant. Fidèlement raconté dans le film, l'homme confiera seulement sa vraie identité au charpentier canadien Samuel Bass joué par Brad Pitt, seul homme blanc à oser montrer sa farouche opposition à l'esclavage en tenant tête à Edwin Epps. Mis dans la confidence, l'homme a ensuite agi comme intermédiaire, en contactant l'épouse de Northup afin qu'elle puisse faire les démarches nécessaires libérer son mari. Avec l'aide du gouverneur de New York, il est libéré en janvier 1853 et décide de poursuivre les trafiquants d'esclaves qui avaient feint de lui offrir un emploi à Washington, douze ans plus tôt, avant de le droguer et de le vendre. Les hommes ont dans un premier temps été acquittés, mais la publication de son histoire, un best-seller vendu à exemplaires en trois ans, a contribué à l'émergence d'un débat sur l'esclavage et à la réouverture de l'affaire. Malgré un nouveau jugement, les deux ravisseurs identifiés, Alexander Merrill et Joseph Russell, ont été libérés. Aucun des propriétaires esclavagistes de Solomon Northup n'a été poursuivi. La fin de vie de Solomon Northup demeure mystérieuse. Après avoir donné des conférences en faveur de l'abolitionnisme, sa trace a été perdue après 1857.
TF1veut proposer à court terme une centaine d'oeuvres (films, téléfilms et séries) du cinéma "afro", dont des classiques, comme 12 Years a
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5 Un très bon acteur, oui, et une réalisation qui n’a pas peur de faire durer certaines scènes et de montrer la crudité et la violence de l’esclavage. Pourtant, cela reste toujours très
I keep reading these blogs about Steve McQueen's 12 Years a Slave claiming that black people are "tired" of seeing yet another slavery movie. Message board comments tell me that some non-black people are tired too, but these people are those who don't understand why a majority of African Americans are inexplicably still a little troubled by slavery, Jim Crow, and ongoing inequality in labor, housing, education, and the criminal justice system. Go I know what they mean. After all, we have all those movies about well-known leaders who were slaves like Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, David Walker, Nat Turner, Sojourner Truth, Denmark Vesey... hmmmm. Not so much? Then I guess they are just tired of all the stories about slavery that show the variety of experiences that took place over 250 years in the United States. I mean, there are at least as many films about slavery as there are about World War II, cowboys in the nineteenth century, or white people during the Civil War, right? What? You mean there's not? Thus the claim that people are "tired" of seeing slavery is fairly indefensible in relationship to the number of other historical genres that have many notable films. I would think that an institution that was immeasurably important in shaping our national history, demonstrating the greatest evils, tragedies, and resilience that we could possibly imagine, would garner a few more notable films than Mandingo, Beloved, Django Unchained, and McQueen's recent entry into the slave film "genre." Sure, there are a few more and while it was on television, we must include Roots in this discussion, but given the number of people who were enslaved and the number of stories that nobody knows about, we have hardly cracked the surface of tales that could be argument is thus a bit baffling. Except it's not. And it isn't baffling because we have issues in this country with telling stories of suffering that don't result in uplift. Critic after critic focuses on how it's just too much suffering "It is torture porn." "Why doesn't Hollywood ever want to fund other stories about African Americans that don't involve suffering?" "Why do white people just love to see brown people subjected?"There is no question that we need a greater variety of representations of African Americans and many different kinds of people in Hollywood film. It is always fair to ask questions about why certain films get made and others do not. But we owe it to McQueen's film to evaluate it on its own terms, and not use it to complain about all the other films that don't exist. The principle complaint about this film is that the suffering is relentless. And it is. McQueen's narrative leaves out a great deal of slave history did I mention that we're talking about 250 years? This is not a film about black resistance. Or the ways in which slaves found joy and community with each other. This film is a meditation on the meaning of slave suffering. After telling the audience the year early in the film, 12 Years a Slave does not give us many clues about the passage of time, or the relief of periodic dates to keep track of when freedom will inevitably come. Time is marked by shifts to different plantations, gradual graying and the haggard appearance of the protagonist, Solomon Northup, and above all, long scenes of the body in pain. I don't think another film about slavery tries to demonstrate conceptually how human beings are, as Elaine Scarry has described it, unmade by pain. It is not entertainment, but it is an artistic rendering that attempts to get the audience to see the passage of time, and the transformation of the body and human spirit under torture, in a new way. And in McQueen's choice to focus so intently on the story of a slave woman named Patsey, Northup's salvation - which we know is coming from the title - does not provide the typical Hollywood uplift. If the audience forgets her cries, still ringing in their ears when Northup sees his family again, they weren't paying attention. The accusation that it is torture porn ignores the fact that pornography is supposed to result in an orgiastic catharsis. The cheers and glee accompanying the rhythm of contemporary torture porn films like Saw, the cheering that accompanies the violence in cartoonish superhero films, and the tear-soaked sentimental catharsis of The Help are not to be found here. While it is always difficult to make claims about audience response, I would suggest that the rhythm of this film leaves you too exhausted to rejoice. There is no John Williams score rising up, as it does at the end of Schindler's List, that allows the audience to cheer the goodness of a savior. People comment that 12 Years a Slave is brutal, that they are wrung out, and that it leaves them broken. It is supposed not made as a response to Quentin Tarantino's Django's Unchained, it is an important response to the deeply conventional Hollywood narrative of that film. Django is an example of the exceptional Negro that proves the rule that real men can rise up and overcome any oppression. And in the narrative logic of the film, the climax, which always involves the death of the most villainous character, doesn't involve killing the slave owner. No, it involves killing the Uncle Tom character, who was actually the one responsible for overseeing Django's fall and torture. Black people, in Django, keep themselves down, and just need inspiration to lift themselves real Solomon Northup also resists slavery, and in an interminable scene, they break him. What does it mean that in the logic of so many narratives of masculinity, that makes him less of a man?Racist resistance to representations of black suffering and anti-racist criticisms of representations of black suffering are actually two sides of the same coin. Producers of both discourses internalize a cultural discourse that sees representations of adult victimization as somehow less artful and distasteful. Looking away has become a national pastime - from the poor, the sick, and the civilians killed by war and drones. It is unclear to me what kinds of representations of suffering can always escape condemnation as sentimental, or manipulative, or "suffering porn." But when we disparage 12 Years a Slave for trying to capture the essence of pain in chattel slavery, we are disavowing people whose pain can never totally be represented. There are, of course, other stories about slavery and black people that can and should be told. But that does not lessen the importance of this one.
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