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Category:    Home > Reviews > Drama > Black Cinema > Hate Crimes > Nothing But A Man - 40th Aniversary Edition

Nothing But A Man – 40th Anniversary Edition

 

Picture: C+     Sound: C+     Extras: B     Film: B

 

 

The debate rages on about if white filmmakers could or should make films about the black Experience or with mostly or all-black casts.  There was a time that a separate African-American cinema existed, but that was played out and snuffed out by circumstances too numerous and ugly to address here.  Michael Roemer’s Nothing But A Man (1964) is a still-impressive and rare film directed and written by white men (co-writer Robert Young also served as cinematographer and co-producer with Roemer and Robert Rubin) that may seem second-person in ways more obvious now than then, but the very exceptional, extraordinary cast are so good, it becomes something special indeed.

 

Ivan Dixon is Duff, whose life is not necessarily going anywhere, but he has some hopes and loves Josie (Abbey Lincoln).  However, is the South sickening enough to get him to go North?  He has his father Will (Julius W. Harris) to deal with, who has never done a thing for him, not to mention various bigoted whites along the way.  The extraordinary cast of mostly unknowns includes also includes Yaphet Kotto, Moses Gunn, Martin Priest and Esther Rolle.

 

The full frame 1.33 X 1 black and white image is limited to some extent due to the format, but this is an impressive use of this kind of stock that makes the film hold up extraordinarily well.  In a time black and white was being overtaken by various color stocks, this is a key monochrome work.  Young is underrated.  The Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo has the luxury of coming from magnetic sound elements, so this has fine sound for its time, age and especially budget.  One of the first times, if not the first time, radio microphones were ever used for a feature film, connected to a magnetic sound Nigra-brand recorder.  Until digital arrived, this was a great recording system, still used by independent productions that know better.  Points also to the superior use of Motown hits before they became classics.  No, Motown Records was not happy music sung by black artists so white yuppie airheads could do feel-good films that no one can remember now.  They are classics because of their core honesty, something they share with this film.

 

Extras include an excellent booklet inside the DVD case with text written by Pittsburgh-based freelance writer Jim Davidson, small interview sequences with Dixon (at about 5 minutes), Julius W. Harris (about 6 minutes), Abbey Lincoln (about 5 minutes) and Roemer/Young (31:33).  The Life & Work Of Abbey Lincoln is a fine featurette (13:20) about Miss Lincoln’s life and Jazz vocal career, with a nice set of interviews and great comments from the lady herself.  Text on the DVD includes separate cast and filmmaker biographies.  I can only disagree with Roemer about the film not having enough humor.  At a time when every film wants to throw in jokes pointlessly, that is a refreshing aspect of the film he may not have considered.

 

Getting back to the issue of directors, race and color, of course African Americans can best tell stories of the Black Experience, yet filmmaking is never that simple.  Steven Spielberg is still criticized for helming The Color Purple in 1985, but it is a film that offers his very best and very worst work in one film.  The failures come in the quasi-stereotypes he falls back on as a substitute for being black, showing the limits in general of him trying to tell real life in Hollywood-speak and images.  However, the moments about pain, rejection, oppression and loneliness are hauntingly dead on, which is why people still love the film regardless.  His underrated Amistad does run into as many troubles, but that 1995 film dares to tell about an ugly moment in America’s past atypical of Spielberg.

 

Spike Lee put himself on the map with She’s Gotta Have It in 1986, and then after School Daze (1988) really ripped things wide open with the impressive Do The Right Thing in 1989.  The only problem Spike runs into is the reverse of Spielberg, trying to tell The Black Experience though (as a friend once noted) the language of the New York Style of filmmaking, a school that runs contrary to being Black in America.  I give him great credit for trying to rewrite it to some small extent, but it is a minor set back versus the other directors from the Black New Wave that did not last long enough; as short in most cases as the new talent discovered.

 

That brings us to David Gordon Green’s George Washington, a 2000 film about poor African American children living in poverty in the south.  It is not a tired “slave cycle” film or of the epic scope of a Lee or Spielberg film.  Like Nothing But A Man, it is a to the point, for real, film about the human experience and shows the characters with intelligence and dignity.  It purposely omits any Hip Hop, DJ, R&B or like music forms.  The point is to get to the characters, something most films by most writers and directors fail to do these days, using music very badly, then as a crutch.  It is an exception in ways that go beyond race, which is why Political Correctness should NEVER be used as a factor for deciding what films get made.  Nothing But A Man is a key American film and minor classic from white filmmakers who proved five years later with The Plot Against Harry (reviewed elsewhere on this site) they were masters of the New York school as well.  The art always triumphs in the end over the political pettiness.  See this great film ASAP.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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