2020年10月30日 星期五

A time to talk movies

A look at two of the most popular “race dramas” of the 1990s.
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By Jamelle Bouie

Opinion Columnist

I thought a lot about what I would write for this afternoon. On one hand, I have a lot of thoughts about the election, about the Trump campaign, about the state of American democracy. On the other hand, I know everyone is exhausted and I like that this space can be a bit of a respite from the direness of everyday politics. With that in mind, here are a few short paragraphs on two of the movies I watched this week.

You would not necessarily think to watch “A Time to Kill” and “Amistad” as a double feature. The former, directed by Joel Schumacher, who died recently, and released in 1996, is an adaptation of John Grisham’s 1989 novel of the same name, a pulpy legal thriller concerning racial violence and retribution in a post-Jim Crow Mississippi. The latter, directed by Steven Spielberg, is a 1997 drama about the slave ship La Amistad and the fight to secure freedom for its captives. But they both are legal thrillers, both star Matthew McConaughey, and both tell us a great deal about how mainstream (read: white) American audiences understood racism in the 1990s.

First, a recap. In “A Time to Kill,” McConaughey plays a young lawyer who takes the case of Carl Lee Hailey, who is on trial for murder. Hailey, played by Samuel L. Jackson, had killed the two men responsible for the abduction, rape and attempted murder of his 10-year-old daughter, shooting them in the courthouse. The film devotes itself to the drama of the trial as well as events in the world at large, as the Hailey case becomes a flash point for civil rights groups, white supremacists and the national media.

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In “Amistad,” McConaughey plays a young lawyer who takes the case of the enslaved men of the ship La Amistad, who overcame their Spanish captors only to be captured by a U.S. revenue cutter. The trial concerns their rightful ownership — whether they were the property of the government of Spain, as argued by Secretary of State John Forsyth on behalf of President Martin Van Buren, or were captured by Spanish slavers and sold illegally, and thus legally free. Their struggle goes all the way to the Supreme Court, and former President John Quincy Adams (played by a wonderful Anthony Hopkins) argues their case and wins their freedom.

If you watch these movies back to back, a few elements make themselves immediately clear. There is the extent to which the Black characters exist as objects to be acted upon, not protagonists in their own right. There is also the extent to which racism is portrayed as a problem of individual souls, not one of power and structure.

But what I’m most interested in is how these movies, taken together, seem to situate racism outside of the present as understood by their audiences. “A Time to Kill” takes place in a small, anonymous Mississippi town. It has a Black sheriff, yes, but its presentation is that of an anachronism, a place removed from the full tide of liberal progress. If the villains of the film are atavistic racists with vicious instincts — from snarling Klansmen to a white juror who doesn’t hesitate to use racial slurs — it is because, the film says, Mississippi is a backward place where the raw bigotry of the past still holds sway.

This sense is hammered home by the aesthetic of the film, which I can only describe as “sweatcore.” Our characters are always sweating, never to enjoy the cool embrace of air conditioning. They’re either caught in the sweltering heat of a Southern summer or the warm neon of a stuffy, humid hotel room. The effect is to set the characters apart, as if they exist in a different universe altogether. “A Time to Kill” takes place in the present of the 1990s, but it presents racism as an ugly relic, whose impact is felt most in those places time has left behind.

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“Amistad,” by contrast, is a period drama. It takes place in 1839, near the height of America’s slave society. And yet, outright racism does not make much of an appearance. Nor do we see many images of slavery outside of a harrowing section depicting the Middle Passage, from the western coast of Africa to the Americas, where captives were subjected to the worst kinds of brutality, up to and including forced drowning when the vessel runs low on supplies.

The purpose of all of this, as far as the viewer goes, is to build sympathy for the captives — led by Djimon Hounsou as Cinqué — as if their suffering is the only way we have to connect to their humanity. It’s also part of the broader arc of the film, which is to present the Amistad case as the first confrontation in a battle that will lead to the Civil War and the liberation of the enslaved.

This is not true — in the real world, the case of La Amistad was a minor curiosity, the resolution of a set of loopholes in American law — but it does fit Spielberg’s expectation of a mainstream audience, that it could only absorb a drama about racial oppression if it were one part in a story that leads to victory and moral renewal. Racism was a problem and now, thanks to the heroism of the protagonists, it is no longer.

This makes “Amistad” the other side of the coin to “A Time to Kill,” in that it also relegates racism to the past. Not by creating a zone of exception in modern society, but by presenting the modern era as, by implicit contrast, a more enlightened place.

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From the perspective of 2020, where Donald Trump is president of the United States and white supremacists have surged back into the mainstream, this is ridiculous. But from the perspective of the 1990s, a time of broad prosperity in which American culture was more racially integrated than ever, it makes a certain amount of sense. For the target Hollywood audience of the time — white, suburban, middle-class and politically moderate — it was comforting (and even a little flattering) to see racism and racial oppression as artifacts of the past that only mattered for the present insofar that there were pockets of resistance to racial equality.

Despite very different styles and subject matter, “Amistad” and “A Time to Kill” both put racism at a remove from their mainstream viewers, reinforcing a (white) political consensus around the declining significance of race. In that, both films represent a remarkably self-satisfied vision for what was, in retrospect, a remarkably self-satisfied time.

What I Wrote

My Friday column is a contribution to The New York Times Opinion section package on what we’ve lost during the Trump years. My answer? Only our illusions.

For as much as it seems that Donald Trump has changed something about the character of this country, the truth is he hasn’t. What is terrible about Trump is also terrible about the United States. Everything we’ve seen in the last four years — the nativism, the racism, the corruption, the wanton exploitation of the weak and unconcealed contempt for the vulnerable — is as much a part of the American story as our highest ideals and aspirations.

Now Reading

David Frum on the Republican dilemma in The Atlantic.

Annette Gordon-Reed on hope and democracy in The New York Review of Books.

Tressie McMillan Cottom on Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at Medium.

David Roth on the political future of Donald Trump Jr. at The New Republic.

Kara Voght on the economists driving Joe Biden’s agenda for Mother Jones.

Feedback

If you’re enjoying what you’re reading, please consider recommending it to friends. They can sign up here. If you want to share your thoughts on an item in this week’s newsletter or on the newsletter in general, please email me at jamelle-newsletter@nytimes.com.

Photo of the Week

Jamelle Bouie

Decided this week to pluck something from my archive! A few years ago, I went to observe a Revolutionary War battle re-enactment outside Williamsburg, Va., and hauled my old press camera with me to take pictures. The re-enactors were happy to pose for my portraits, and this one was one of my favorites.

Now Eating: Lentil Soup

I have been eating a lot of lentil soup lately, and all of it has been a variation on this recipe from Melissa Clark of The New York Times. I use a full mirepoix instead of just onions and garlic, and I go a little crazy with the herbs, sautéing the vegetables with chopped parsley and celery leaf. I also add another ¼ cup of lentils so that the soup is a little thicker when I purée it at the end. I usually finish with a drizzle of olive oil and a garnish of herbs. But that’s just me! You can go in any direction you like, since lentil soup is endlessly flexible.

Ingredients

  • 6 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil, plus more as needed
  • 1 large onion, diced
  • 1½ teaspoons kosher salt, plus more as needed
  • 1 quart chicken, beef or vegetable stock, preferably homemade
  • 1 cup brown or green lentils, rinsed
  • 2 thyme or rosemary sprigs
  • 1 to 2 garlic cloves, finely grated or pushed through a garlic press
  • 1 teaspoon white-wine, sherry or cider vinegar, or lemon or lime juice, plus more to taste
  • ½ cup thinly sliced radicchio, or red or green cabbage (optional)
  • ½ cup parsley leaves, chopped

Directions

Heat ¼ cup oil in a medium pot over medium-high heat. Stir in onions and ½ teaspoon salt, and cook until onions start to brown at the edges, stirring frequently, 6 to 9 minutes.

Stir in stock, lentils, thyme and remaining 1 teaspoon salt. Bring to a simmer, cover and cook until lentils are tender, 30 to 40 minutes. Discard thyme sprigs.

Stir in garlic and remaining 2 tablespoons oil, and use an immersion blender to purée the soup to the desired consistency, keeping it chunky or making it smooth. (Alternatively, ladle it into a blender and blend in batches.) Stir in vinegar, then taste and add more salt and vinegar if needed.

In a small bowl, toss radicchio, if using, and parsley with a drizzle of oil and a sprinkle of salt. To serve, ladle soup into bowls and top with a small mound of radicchio and parsley, and/or any other garnishes you like.

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On Tech: Amazon and Google’s true advantage

These companies have mastered spending big to stay Big Tech.

Amazon and Google’s true advantage

Charlie Le Maignan

My colleagues wrote about the eye-popping sales numbers coming from America’s technology superstars, including Google, Facebook and Amazon. Their sales and profits this year, in the middle of a pandemic, are truly hard to fathom. It’s so much money, you guys.

But these companies also spend gobs of money, which in turn helps them make more money.

The ability to spend like crazy — because Big Tech has money and hardly anyone questions how the companies spend it — is one of the secrets to why the tech industry giants are so difficult to unseat.

A few examples: Amazon hired 250,000 full- and part-time employees — on average roughly 2,800 each day in the 90 days that ended in September — and then about 100,000 more people in October, the company said. Google has spent nearly $17 billion this year on things like hulking computer equipment — that’s about the same as Exxon’s comparable spending figure for digging oil and gas out of the ground.

Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg talked excitedly on Thursday about spending whatever it takes on futuristic projects like eyeglasses that overlay virtual images with the real world. Imagine walking down the street and seeing a virtual list of menu items for the taco shop on the corner.

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Some of this stuff, yes, can immediately help companies generate more of those eye-popping sales and profits that my colleagues wrote about. When Amazon hires people to work in its warehouses or to drive trucks, those workers help push more packages to your door this Christmas.

But a lot of this stuff, honestly, who knows. What the heck is Apple cooking up in its research labs, on which it spent $19 billion in the last year? Can Facebook get us to buy into a future of our world mixed with virtual images? Are Amazon’s gazillions of new package warehouses, transportation depots and computer centers really justified? This is the kind of stuff that might never pay off.

And that’s one reason Big Tech is so different. Few large companies get mostly patted on the back for spending money in ways that may — or may not — pay off.

This is part of the ultimate dilemma about these technology giants that dominate our lives and often our leisure and work hours. They make tons of money, which means they have more money to stay on top. (Also, governments and competitors say these companies break the rules to advantage themselves at the expense of rivals, hurting consumers like us.)

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One of the most cringe-inducing words in business is “moat.” What this means is a company has some unique advantage — a globally recognized brand name for Coca-Cola, or a unique technology that helps Uber move cars around efficiently — that gives it an unbreachable border of water filled with monsters.

It’s a terrible, overused piece of jargon. But the tech superstars have a moat. (Imagine me cringing as I typed that.) Their unique advantage is access to giant piles of money. And they’re using it to dig that watery trench of monsters even deeper.

SEND US YOUR QUESTIONS: We want to hear your election tech questions. What are you curious or concerned about related to how tech companies are handling election-related misinformation, or how secure America’s election technology is? Send your questions to ontech@nytimes.com, and we’ll answer a selection. Please include your full name and location.

Don’t fall for bogus holiday ‘deals’ online

Retailers really, really, really want you to start your holiday shopping early, because — well, read this about possible holiday package shipping delays. That means Black Friday and other preholiday sales have already started. The problem is, a lot of times when websites scream DEAL it’s not actually a good deal.

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Nathan Burrow from The New York Times’s product review website, Wirecutter, has these tips to make sure we’re not getting fooled by something that promises a discount but is a bad buy:

Comparison shop: The hot item that the website says you can’t find for less anywhere else? Yeah, you probably can. Type the name of the product into a shopping search in your web browser. (If you’re considering a “flash” sale online, first add the item to your shopping cart. Often you have up to 15 minutes to check out, enough time to check on the price.)

Read the reviews: Customer reviews aren’t always reliable. So read up on a product that intrigues you from multiple publications — may I suggest Wirecutter? This isn’t a guarantee that you’re getting a good price, but it will help you avoid getting excited by a sale and buying a junk product.

Use (free!) shopping tools: Websites like CamelCamelCamel.com or Keepa will give you a useful, albeit imperfect, idea of how much a given item has sold for on Amazon over time. That’s a good indication of whether you’re getting a good deal right now, or can wait.

Even when you’re not shopping on Amazon, you can check whether the retailer’s price is a good deal by comparing it to how much the same product tends to sell for on Amazon.

Have an informed plan: Don’t believe the hype, be patient and know that there are good discounts to be found. You may just need to cut through the noise to find them.

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Before we go …

  • He’s a star on Facebook. He’s not sure why: My colleague Kevin Roose talked to Dan Bongino, the right-wing commentator who said he can’t really explain why he went from a B-list pundit to one of the most popular figures on Facebook. Kevin writes that it’s both charming and terrifying that people like Bongino get big on Facebook, YouTube and TikTok because their “personas happen to fit into the grooves of a platform’s algorithm.”
  • Listen to this to understand the antitrust case against Big Tech: Lina Khan helped reshape the legal views on how antitrust laws apply to big technology companies. On my colleague Kara Swisher’s podcast, “Sway,” Khan had a clear explanation of how she believed big technology companies hurt all of us, and she gave a glimpse inside Congress’s recent investigation into Big Tech power.
  • Sigh. Math problems by emoji is not a good solution: Bloomberg News writes about teachers in the Philippines improvising remote classes with printed handouts and lessons over Facebook Messenger, because a majority of the country’s households have limited internet access. One teacher started texting her students a daily math problem using emojis in place of numbers.

Hugs to this

The best moment of my week was reading this article about people who are obsessed with the $300 12-foot Halloween skeleton sold by Home Depot. (Also hello to this video of a Home Depot skeleton lashed to the roof of a Mini Cooper.)

We want to hear from you. Tell us what you think of this newsletter and what else you’d like us to explore. You can reach us at ontech@nytimes.com.

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