Ava DuVernay's "When They See Us" is a Masterclass in How to Depict Racists On Screen.
/Historically, racism as a subject matter in film and Television has been handled poorly, mostly because racism in our country has been handled so poorly. I think most films on the subject are rote, basic, overly simplistic in their discourse, and in their perspective regarding the large scale implications, and harm, the practice does to a nation and a people as well as to the individual. This is largely because they disconnect the personal from the systemic. What Ava has done so well in her latest addition to Netflix is create a deeply moving, engaging narrative string theory that connects the personal directly to the systemic in a way that doesn't devolve either. By doing so she avoids the caricaturization of racism and its proponents common in film and television of this nature made by other creators (mostly white folk). These efforts by other directors like the Farrelly brother's “The Green Book” whittle down the insidiousness of white supremacy to the work of a couple or a few choice villains rather than a collective effort by a vast spectrum of personalities with varying motivations. This reduction so popular in history books films or series written, helmed and created by white folk commits two sins: it A. allows the actual full breadth and harm of white supremacy to crawl under the legs of these manufactured cartoons and out the back door, and B. Creates poor boring characters ( I SWEAR I BARELY even recall Sam Rockwell’s character in “Three Billboards” for this exact reason, he’s a very well drawn character…for a cartoon). The effect? It creates no call to action, and saves white people from embarrassment and accountability. In a cartoon if a boulder falls on said villain Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner is safe until the next time his death is plotted by Wile E, who has no rhyme no reason to his desire for harm other than the simplified explanation that it is simply in his nature to be so. we gain nothing from this other than the entertainment. In a fashion this has been the way our very real pain, trauma, harm, and hurt has been historically portrayed on screen by whites. A garish cartoon where we watch oppression play out in a variety of schemes by one perpetrator, who is eventually quelled, until the next episode, purely for our entertainment. …
What really stood out to me upon doing or taking an inventory of what moved me so much about the story being told in “When They See Us” was not only Ava's execution in showing micro and macro cause and effect in systemic oppression, but her understanding of these functions and expressions as more than just racism as a motivation in and of itself. It is a body to head one two punch that knocks the audience off its feet and into recovery mode well after the credits run. The character that best embodies just how well and deeply Ava understands these processes and the people in them is Linda Fairstein. Now in order to properly frame what Ava is doing, and how much better it's done, both from a filmmaking and philosophical standpoint I feel I have to show someone who doesn't do it well..the aforementioned Sam Rockwell characterJason Dixon in Martin Mcdonagh's “The Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri".
I think it's important to note the difference in the introductions of each of these characters and how they align to show the differences in approach. Rockwell's character in the three billboards is alone when we first meet him and his racism is made evident from the very beginning. Two things are being established here 1 he is alone in his racism, which in turn reinforces the childish, (But safe for white people) idea that racism is an individual problem. 2. That this is the beginning of his arc because it is where he starts, so that we are being set up for him to either grow or get his, the former rather insidious because it not only seeks to have us empathize or rather understand his motivations, but to identify with them. Not only that, but from the very beginning the light in which his racism is shown is not taken tonally serious at all. It is again an example of racism played for laughs that completely ignores the widespread ramifications of this mans cruelty, it's not funny. I'm not one of those that thinks that you can't make fun of, or have a laugh at the expense of racist or racism (sometimes its all you can do) but I think that that line is very fine and that the jokes have to come as offerings of levity from a stance that makes clear its depravity systemically as well as interpersonally. For a better example of this kind of line being drawn one can look to the 1999 film “Life” starring Eddie Murphy and Martin Lawrence....
The scene from Life is clearly from the perspective of those offended, this is in essence what they see. Throughout the movie it makes clear not only the harm to these two men, but black men all over (Interestingly enough both Life and When they see us are about a cruel and injust system that railroads black bodies into dehumanizing life in prison) and the result is a movie that both makes us laugh and cry at the injustice we have endured and prevailed over in our long suffering here on this most desperate island of eternal hope and damnation. Meanwhile back over at the three billboards, when black people are there, and in the vicinity of Rockwell’s or anyone else’s racism the scene is seen from the perspective of the offender, and is drawn to connect us with his point of view. The presence of its black citizens are barely made known, much less any examination of what the effects of a clearly racist police force has had on it's denizen’s. In concert with the centralization of the arc of its very racist cop, it serves the doubly troublesome effect of humanizing (not necessarily harmful in and of itself ) its racist character, and dehumanizing his victims.
Its really hard to find a scene in “The Three Billboards of Ebbing Missouri” that reckons with race in a meaningful way, because its pretty hard to find black people in it from whose point of view we can see it.