Tampilkan postingan dengan label Stephane Dunn. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Stephane Dunn. Tampilkan semua postingan

Senin, 19 November 2012

Denzel Soars; 'Flight' Hits Turbulence


Denzel Soars; Flight Hits Turbulence
by Stephane Dunn | special to NewBlackMan (in Exile)

Typically, I avoid movies about plane crashes. I could easily slide into having a phobia about flying but like to travel to places that a car can’t take me. I had an inkling that Flight would be worth my relaxing the no plane crash film, and well, Denzel Washington is in it. Flight presents Washington’s arguably finest performance in some time. It is a fitting tour de force that suggests the actor’s studied integration of all that’s he’s accumulated over the years in a film career that has made him the superstar ‘Denzel Washington’ and, thankfully, an actor who can really draw us into the character he inhibits, sometimes making the iconic superstar looming so large in our consciousness at least temporarily recede.

Washington plays Whip Whitaker, a veteran commercial pilot who makes a stunning, successful emergency landing. He becomes an instant hero and just as quickly an anti-hero of the most complicated kind. It turns out he’s an egomaniacal drunk and cocaine user who doesn’t let flying get in the way of his daily indulgence in the excesses of alcohol and drugs.  Flight is directed by Robert Zemeckis and co-stars Don Cheadle and John Goodman who make their moments on screen count the way we have come to expect talented character actors to do.


Flight is a movie you ponder after leaving the theatre. It offers some breathtaking shooting and editing; the crash sequence registers as scarily real and will make other nervous flyers more so after seeing the movie. Even veterans of the sky may tense up a bit should they ever hit turbulence again. Though it is visually arresting, the more stunning spectacle is Whip’s determined self-destruction.  The panoramic view of an airplane in flight at night as Whips gazes wistfully at it, an achingly long still shot of one little vodka bottle, and Washington’s engrossing, authentic portrait of a man disintegrating into alcoholic decay are the memorable ingredients of the film.

This is why it’s so disappointing that Flight undermines its depth not to mention moments of fine writing and direction by lapsing into some tired staples of popular film – not the least of which is the ridiculously obvious heterosexist framing of the major female characters.

The opening scene, which introduces a hung over Whip, makes the point. Whip awakes to a phone call from you guessed it – a nagging ex-wife and mother of his fifteen year old son whom he complains only calls when she needs money. While a hung over Whip winds his way through the call, his naked bed mate, flight attendant Katerina Marquez (Nadine Velazquez), rises and begins to dress. The camera follows her body in the background, curiously blurs for a second on her ample breasts then amplifies the focus on a full frontal shot of her as she slips on panties. She ends up on Whip’s lap atop the bed for a few last seconds of sexually suggestive repartee. At one point, her breasts jangle over Whip, and that’s all we see of her. In keeping with Hollywood’s long accepted safe guarding of the sacred phallus and Denzel Washington’s preferences regarding his on-screen nudity, we don’t see Whip naked just a hint of his backside here and there.

The flight attendant does come to play a crucial role in Whip’s fate [no spoiler here]. It is unnecessary not to mention annoyingly formulaic that the camera situates her as a pretty, young, naked object with big breasts like a cheap 1970s B-grade action flick. The movie falls prey to more all too unnecessary pitfalls of contemporary Hollywoodish cinema with the insertion of the younger, hard-on-her-luck good hearted white girl junkie (Kelly Reilly) who doubles as damsel in distress and symbol of Whip’s possible redemption. Nicole and Whip’s unlikely meeting in the stairway of a hospital with an of course quirky terminally ill cancer patient becomes the prelude to something it should’ve resisted – a romance. The big moment – the massage, the look, the kiss, is almost laughable. It’s that predictable and tries too painfully hard to be the beginning of something greater than it should be.

The real story – Whip’s gleeful immersion in his addictions and arrogant denial of its consequences doesn’t need such an implausible, dry love story. A friendship might’ve worked if it didn’t insist that since she is a woman and he is a man they must have sex and really fall for each other. This is what happens when a film interrupts a great story and the performance of compelling character complexity to throw in some clichéd staples as if it’s afraid we won’t stay tuned in if there’s absolutely no female nudity or sex or the promise of a great romance with a redeemed working class kind of gal.

Flight develops like the literal and figurative ride it depicts. It has arresting highs and some unnecessary lows. It overstays its welcome a tad by not knowing where to end and in a strange,  jarringly overt nod  to one of Washington’s most iconic roles, Whip actually echoes Malcolm X  in one of the last scenes [the line, place, and circumstances? No spoiler here]. You’ll have to take the bumpy yet memorable ride that Flight offers.

***

Stephane Dunn, PhD, is a writer and Co-Director of the Film, Television, & Emerging Media Studies program at Morehouse College. She is the author of the 2008 book, Baad Bitches & Sassy Supermamas : Black Power Action Films (U of Illinois Press), which explores the representation of race, gender, and sexuality in the Black Power and feminist influenced explosion of black action films in the early 1970s, including, Sweetback Sweetback’s Baad Assssss Song, Cleopatra Jones, and Foxy Brown. Her writings have appeared in Ms., The Chronicle of Higher Education, TheRoot.com, AJC, CNN.com, and Best African American Essays, among others. Her most recent work includes articles about contemporary black film representation and Tyler Perry films.


Senin, 08 Oktober 2012

Diva Tripping: Why Nikki’s Rap on Mariah Plays Badly for All of Us


Diva Tripping: Why Nikki’s Rap on Mariah Plays Badly for All of Us
by Stephane Dunn | special to NewBlackMan (in Exile)
Think I'm playin? Think this sh*t is a f*cking joke? Think it's a joke? . . . Say one more disrespectful thing to me, if you say one more disrespectful thing to me -- off with your head—Nikki  Minaj [off screen about Mariah Carey]
Maybe it’s just about the ratings. Behind the scenes drama, real or made up, can derail or propel a television show to new heights. Like it or not, the Kardashians keep reminding us of this. Popular culture has always loved to see girls playing or working badly together whether over men or first diva bragging rights. We can watch reruns of the catfights between Crystal and Alexis on the old Dynastytelevision show to see how much it delights in it. Some epic diva to diva tensions have played out in black popular music culture. Remember Lil’ Kim and Foxy Brown and Lil’ Kim and Faith Evans and the imagined or real tensions between Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston?
The recent Nikki Minaj rant on Mariah Carey may keep American Idol lovers holding their breaths until the new season premiere and attract new viewers – more young women of color in particular, but it’s unfortunate for those young women and all of us. It’s time we have some real talk about the meanings and representation of the Diva. ‘Diva’ came to signify a larger than life talent and performer. Now it doubles for another word – the ultimate diss one woman or man can give another or call a troublesome or out of control female egomaniac [think Scarlet O’ Hara]: bitch.

At different times in American culture, the “B’ word has challenged and perpetuated the use of its literal meaning [female dog] to demean women. Some early-70s feminists embraced the identity as a defiance of patriarchal authority or a refusal to play by the established gender hierarchy and the rules of so-called proper feminine behavior. The word was a staple in black action movies where badd ass heroes and underworld kings owned stables of women. The women jockeyed over number one ‘ho’ status hurling ‘bitch’ at each other while snatching wigs off and clawing each other. There was also Pam Grier’s Foxy Brown, which flipped the script by presenting a real “badd Bitch’ who got to turn the tables on all the crooked men and fight off a lot of jealous ‘bitches’ in between.
Later, there was Lil ‘Kim and rapper Foxy Brown’s duel over baddest ‘Bitch’ bragging rights and the emergence of pop songstresses who could ‘sang’ that became reigning divas. But the term got so watered down, it lost that special implication of a phenomenal vocal talent and career.
On cable and network television these days, ‘bitch’ is thrown around as a term of endearment, a proud self-title, and an ultimate diss—no bleeps and gasps. ‘Diva’ can be tagged to anybody on the charts or off who is famous and having beef with somebody else famous, causing too much trouble, or famously getting into trouble, or any sista living large within fame and fortune who demands that things be her way or no way. Mariah has certainly long been deemed ‘Diva’ for reasons worthy of applause and critique. Clearly, ‘diva’ and ‘bitch’ have become sides of a same coin, each perpetuating tired notions about women we’ve at times challenged and resisted. On the behind the scenes tape, Nikki lays down the battleground for a full-on ‘diva’ vs. ‘bitch’ war with herself behaving like a diva and at the same time embodying the ‘I’m the real Badd Bitch’ persona in part defined by Lil Kim and Foxy Brown.
In rap music, lyrics about shooting have been metaphors in lyrical battles and references to a real violent street mentality as well as lived experiences of violence. Nikki has denied bringing a gun into her rant about Mariah. The alleged statement was not caught on tape or overheard by everyone. Nikki was probably letting off some steam in the style emblematic of the culture she reps. Maybe there has been some real troublesome diva-tude from Mariah that riled her up. Regardless, how and what Nikki did say, ter ‘bitch’ and ‘her fucking highness’ should cause us serious pause. How has ‘diva’ become interchangeable with ‘bitch’ with both being used to disrespect women or demonize femininity?
Audiences, especially those most impressionable, young girls and boys, will tune in to witness some real drama between the divas they want to be like. Unfortunately, they won’t all be consciously checking the possible distance between the real thing and the performance. Neither will a lot of grown folk who cringe at the “N” word but don’t think twice about calling somebody the “B” word.

***

Stephane Dunn, PhD, is a writer and Co-Director of the Film, Television, & Emerging Media Studies program at Morehouse College. She is the author of the 2008 book, Baad Bitches & Sassy Supermamas : Black Power Action Films (U of Illinois Press), which explores the representation of race, gender, and sexuality in the Black Power and feminist influenced explosion of black action films in the early 1970s, including, Sweetback Sweetback’s Baad Assssss Song, Cleopatra Jones, and Foxy Brown. Her writings have appeared in Ms., The Chronicle of Higher Education, TheRoot.com, AJC, CNN.com, andBest African American Essays, among others. Her most recent work includes articles about contemporary black film representation and Tyler Perry films.

Minggu, 12 Februari 2012

Whitney




Whitney
by Stephane Dunn | special to NewBlackMan

I’m at some once a year fancy gala – the kind of thing that makes you suffer through three inch heels and a bitter February wind to see and be seen. Half into the spinach with arugula and pecans salad with orange sesame dressing, a whisper builds and people begin to forget the discrete lap level text check and they're holding the blackberries and i-phones up close, squinting and reading, texting, and sighing then they look up across the table at a stranger formerly of little interest who looks back asking the same question: Is Whitney really dead? 

And soon, the Facebook posts and twitter feeds confirm it, and I keep eating bread and butter and there are voices in the background. There’s a program and distinguished people are getting awards and people are clapping, but in my head I’m screaming with clenched fists like Florida Evans: Damn, Damn, Damn! Whitney Houston is dead. I want to scream it really and stop the program just for a second, just to confirm, something momentous has happened. The awards and the chatter go on and a movie is running through my head. 1978’s Sparkle, a pretty, sultry brown girl starts to sing her way out of the ghetto with her little sisters. She falls for a user and an abuser and then she’s on drugs and bruised and dead. The remake marks Whitney’s return to the big screen only Whitney doesn’t play Sister but now she’s dead too.

By three am, I’m sitting on the same couch in the same spot where I was sitting on June 25, 2009 when a part of my youth passed away with a headline: Michael Jackson has died. And now, another headline takes another part, my young adult life. I flashback to college, last dance of the school year, end of April, and my heart is breaking. My first adult love is crashing. I don’t want to let go, but it’s over. He asks me to dance. I want to be close to him, but I want to say no. Whitney’s singing: Where do broken hearts go, do they find their way home . . . and I know it’s his goodbye, and we’re not going to make-up ever again.

I see her glimmering like golden brown sand in the sun on album covers and on stage and I like her ‘cause she’s skinny like me and utterly gorgeous and she can saaaaang. She makes me wish I could sing too and I do [in secret] and when I’m struggling with classes and bill paying and just trying to find my way and make it to somewhere, I hum and sometimes wail, badly, alone, in my little efficiency apartment, . . . because the greatest love of all is happening to me, I found the greatest love of all inside of me . . .

I think about me and my sister friends going to check out Waiting to Exhale and wearing out that soundtrack and lip syncing and I think about Whitney, sitting there pregnant and fine in that video singing that Dolly song from earth to heaven and back and wondering, how can the girl sing like that and then I glimpse myself cranking up the radio ‘cause they’re playing Whitney’s song, and I gotta marvel all over again. And I will always love youuuu. I see me cringing every time some wannabe-the-next-Whitney dared take on one of her songs and arguing folk down who don’t know better. Nobody sung that national anthem like Whitney. Nobody. Period. 

It’s after four am, and I keep thinking and remembering and hearing that voice, and how much it hurt over the years to think of her hurting and not singing and people talking about her and judging and her becoming one of those stories of the wayward star gone the way of drama and drugs. I never gave her up. I claimed her survival and her triumph. I’m tearing up. CNN is playing that damned too beautiful song . . . bittersweet memories . . . I can’t stand it – headlines, reflections, tributes, ‘we’ll always have her music’. I don’t want it to be the same old story. It shouldn’t be the same old story.

I want real talk about how folk can be prepared for being inside of fame and how they can be saved before they lose their voices. I want new ways to protect and arm those ambitious geniuses against the snares on the way to fame and fortune. I want her not to be like those other too surreally phenomenal songstresses from Billie to Judy and Amy.

Whitney Houston dead at forty-eight.

***

Stephane Dunn, Ph.D., is a writer and Co-Director of the Cinema, Television, and Emerging Media Studies Program at Morehouse College. She specializes in film, popular culture, and literature. She is the author of Baad Bitches and Sassy Supermamas: Black Power Action Films (University of Illinois Press 2008) and her work has appeared in such publications as Ms., TheRoot, The Chronicle of Higher Education, CNN.com, and Best African American Essays.

Rabu, 05 Januari 2011

Quiet Lockdown: The Scott Sisters, Black Women and Miscarriage of Justice in the South



Mississippi case is a current example of a historical bias in the judicial process.

Quiet Lockdown:
The Scott Sisters, Black Women and Miscarriage of Justice in the South
by Stephane Dunn | TheLoop21

After serving sixteen years and their young adult lives behind bars, the Scott sisters are finally good headline news; Governor Barbour’s pardon of the Mississippi sisters and the stipulation – the gift of one sister’s kidney to the other is the feel good story of the moment; in truth it remains a tragic commentary about unjust justice.

Jamie and Gladys Scott, now 36 and 38, committed a crime, armed robbery which netted them 11 bucks, but then they were victimized by the system. The three black men involved pointed to the sisters for orchestrating the crime and served little time, while the Scotts were given an absurdly severe penalty: a life sentence. More than just another example of how the legal system has been unjust to black folk and women, the Scott case also speaks specifically to black women's historical experience with the judicial process. While black male persecution under the law has generated more publicity, ( for example the newsmaking 1931 Scottsboro Boys case) black females have shared a similar reality.

In the South, from slavery through the present, black women have had a long history of brutal mistreatment by racist criminal legal systems. Time and time again courts have famously denied black women their humanity and ignored the underlining racial politics that determined their fates.

Read the Full Essay @ theLoop21

Selasa, 04 Januari 2011

"Did He just Say ‘Nigger’?--PBS KIds Sprout Responds



"Did He just Say ‘Nigger’?--PBS KIds Sprout Responds

This is Jenni Glenn, posting on behalf of Sprout. Our quotes have been taken out of context in the above post by Dr. Dunn, and we feel it is important for you and your readers to see our complete response to her:

"Dear Dr. Dunn and Mr. Muhammad,

We have taken your concern very seriously, reviewed the episode in question, and thoroughly researched the issue. Included below is a direct response from Jocelyn Stevenson, the producer of What’s Your News?. Ms. Stevenson is a respected professional who has worked in children’s television for over thirty years as a writer, producer and creator of programming for young children. Her credits include Sesame Street, Barney & Friends, Bob the Builder, The Magic Schoolbus and many more.

As you will see below, the word in question that the child used in this episode is “never.” However, we do acknowledge that it is sometimes difficult to understand children’s speech patterns. Therefore, in an effort to prevent any potential for future misinterpretation of the word “never” in this episode, we will edit this segment accordingly.

Following is the response from Ms. Stevenson:

“In response to the query from the viewer who says that she heard one of the children in the “Broken Ankle” episode of What's Your News? use an offensive, racially-charged word, the word the child used was "never." The exchange, which happened during a behind-the-sofa puppet show that the boy Michael was putting on with his friend Liam in order to cheer up his sister Claire (who has a broken ankle), went like this:

(Michael is playing the part of Mad Snake and Liam is Monster Moose. We don't see the boys because they're behind the sofa, but do see the stuffed toys - a snake and a moose with home-made fangs - they are using as puppets.)

LIAM (OS): Don't you hiss at me, Mad Snake!
MICHAEL (OS): I can if I want to! Hssssssss!
LIAM (OS): This is your last chance to give up!
MICHAEL (OS): Never!
LIAM (OS): Roar!

Michael clearly says the word "never." What's Your News? is designed to connect young children around the world with their stories, their news. Four to six year old children are emerging from the family environment into the big, wide world. And that world can feel scary and overwhelming. What's Your News? was created to help children make the home-to-world transition with a feeling of connection – an understanding that there are other children out there who are doing what they do, feeling what they feel. It celebrates and honors a child’s experience of just being a kid.

Not only is the misinterpretation of the word used in this episode a complete antithesis of our vision, but it is also impossible that such repellant and offensive language would get past all the experienced professionals who watch the footage and listen to the sound for each and every episode of the series we make for children, including and especially Sprout’s Standards and Practices Department. " --Jocelyn Stevenson

We hope that you can now rest assured knowing that such an offensive word would never be uttered on any of Sprout’s respected, gold-standard programming. We thank you for being a loyal and engaged Sprout viewer and hope that we have answered all of your concerns.

Sincerely,


Jenni Glenn
VP, Communications and Marketing
Sprout

Selasa, 07 Desember 2010

Rediscovering Ourselves in Classic Black Books



A Time To Read:
Rediscovering Ourselves in Classic Black Books
by Stephane Dunn | TheLoop21

I’d huddle under the covers, literally reading by flashlight after I’d worn out Mama’s indulgence and she ordered the light off and me to sleep. There was always some book I couldn’t let go of easily. Mama and my father helped create my reading addictions; there were always books – all the Hans Christian Andersen and Walt Disney fairytales, children’s encyclopedias and so forth, and I tagged along to the library with my big sister who remembers taking me to there for my first library card.

Between fifth and seventh grades, there were the Nancy Drew and Judy Blume books, Walter Dean Myers, and the 'Little House on the Prairie' series. In middle school, I fell upon 'Little Women' and 'The Grapes of Wrath,' John Steinbeck’s beautiful tragic tale of the Joads, a displaced family of poor white sharecroppers in the depression era that drew me again and again.

Then there was a turning point in my reading life somewhere around the summer before eighth grade. I combed the library shelves looking for something different – actually some more books by black writers - and discovered an autobiography I’ve never forgotten and reread many time. 'Coming of Age in Mississippi' by Anne Moody brought the Civil Rights movement alive for a post Civil-rights young girl like me, growing up in the Midwest, far removed from my Mom’s adolescence spent picking cotton in the South. I could imagine what it was like being a black girl, surviving despite being preyed upon by white and black men and fighting white supremacy amidst the constant threat of violence and death.

I was starved then for other stories by black voices and I found many – Richard Wright, Maya Angelou, Ralph Ellison, Margaret Walker, Mildred Taylor, Walter Mosley, Gloria Naylor, Charles Johnson, Malcolm X, Octavia Butler, Toni Cade Bambara, and too many more to list them all. I was helped along from the tenth to twelfth grade when Mrs. Poe, my white English teacher, saw my passion for books, and opened up her considerable private collection of books by black authors to me. By senior year, I’d cried over Morrison’s Pecola, Alice Walker’s Celie, and Anne Petry’s (pre-'Coldest Winter Ever' and 'Push') urban black girl tale – 'The Street.' I was an average student by high school standards (somewhere between a low B and C range), but little did I know, my reading habit formed a foundation that would help me be successful in college. I was a disciplined reader and I loved it.

Read the Full Essay @ theLoop21

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Kamis, 02 Desember 2010

Stephane Dunn on the Contradictions of College Sports



"We're going to do whatever it takes to get back to the top of the college football world"

Which Way to Win? The Hurricanes, College Football, and Losing Off-Field
by Stephane Dunn | TheLoop21

We all know the name of the game is winning for as much exposure, money, and prestige as possible. It’s the same in competitive sports on the professional and college level and particularly so for prominent sports like football. However, the winning orientation on the college front should be different because there, the operative term is student athlete.

Winning games and competing at national title standards should be balanced by another required winning demand: superior graduation rates and program integrity.

This past week, we again witness how little winning off the field – producing academically sound college graduates and developing socially responsible young men means in the bowl heavy, top dog race mentality that dominates college football.

The University of Miami, one of the former football powerhouses in the nation, dumped Randy Shannon after a recent four year contract extension and four seasons of striving to do as he was charged to do: turn the football program around towards a more positive and of course winning direction. Winning as many games as possible is a desired even admirable goal of competition.

A coach’s position, particularly with major sports programs such as Miami’s football Hurricanes, is automatically in jeopardy for not winning enough games and competing for division and national titles. The problem is that a game winning, national title status coach can be a dismal failure at superior leadership off the field and lead teams with embarrassing student graduation rates.

Read the Full Essay @ theLoop21

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Senin, 13 September 2010

'Left of Black': Episode #1 featuring Zelda Lockhart and Stephane Dunn



'Left of Black'
w/Mark Anthony Neal
Monday, September 13, 2010

Guests:

Author Zelda Lockhart joins 'Left of Black' to discuss her new book 'Fifth Born II: The One Hundredth Turtle' and how the issues of homosexuality, violence and shame affect Black communities. Lockhart also discusses her decision to publish independently.

theLoop21.com columnist and Morehouse College professor Stephane Dunn discusses her recent essay 'When Mega Churchin' Fails' and the new ESPN 30 by 30 documentary 'One Night in Vegas.'

***

'Left of Black' is produced by Jason Doty and Catherine Angst for the John Hope Franklin Center.

Music provided by 9th Wonder of 9th Wonder Music

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