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African American cinema

African American cinema is loosely classified as films made by, for, or about Black Americans.[1] Historically, African American films have been made with African-American casts and marketed to African-American audiences.[1] The production team and director were sometimes also African American.[2] More recently, Black films featuring multicultural casts aimed at multicultural audiences have also included American Blackness as an essential aspect of the storyline.[1][2][3]

Three Film Pioneers
Oscar Micheaux is considered the first major African-American feature filmmaker. He made his first film in 1919 and (44 films later) his last in 1948.
Maria P. Williams is considered the first Black woman film producer for the 5-reel silent drama based on her own screenplay for Flames of Wrath in 1923.
Lester Walton started writing film criticism in 1908 for the national mainstream Black newspaper New York Age. His reviews and insights remain foundational for subsequent Black film literature.

Segregation, discrimination, issues of representation, derogatory stereotypes and tired tropes have dogged Black American cinema from the start of a century-plus history that roughly coincided with the century-plus history of American cinema.[4][5] From the very earliest days of moving pictures, major studios used Black actors to appeal to Black audiences while also often relegating them to bit parts, casting women as maids or nannies, and men as natives or servants[6] or either gender as a "magical negro," an update on the "noble savage."

Black filmmakers, producers, critics and others have resisted narrow archetypes and offensive representation in many ways. As early as 1909, Lester A. Walton the arts critic for New York Age was making sophisticated arguments against the objectification of Black bodies onscreen, pointing out that "anti-Negro propaganda strikes at the very roots of the fundamental principles of democracy."[7] Noting the educational impact film could have, he also argued that it could be used to "emancipate the white American from his peculiar ideas," which were "hurtful to both races."[7]

The "race films" of 1915 to the mid-1950s followed a similar spirit of "racial uplift" and educational "counter-programing" with an eye to combating the racism of the Jim Crow south.[8] That sensibility shifted markedly in the 1960s and '70s. Although Blaxploitation films continued to include stereotypical characters, they were also praised for portraying Black people as the heroes and subjects of their own stories.[9]

By the 1980s, auteurs like Spike Lee and John Singleton created nuanced depictions of Black lives, which led the way for later filmmakers like Jordan Peele and Ava DuVernay to use a range of genres (horror, history, documentary, fantasy) to explore Black lives from multiple perspectives. Ryan Coogler's 2018 blockbuster superhero film Black Panther has also been widely praised for creating a fully realized Afrocentric urban utopia of Black people that include a foundation myth, a legendary hero and takes "utter delight in its African-ness."[10]

History edit

The short film Something Good – Negro Kiss was made in 1898. Early commercial films often depicted minstrel shows until vaudeville acts overtook them in popularity.[3][11] An African American appeared in narrative film at least as early as 1909, which is also the year that Siegmund Lubin produced the comedy series, using a Black cast, with the derogatory title Sambo. Before then, film roles for Black actors were played by white actors in blackface.[12] Sam Lucas became the first Black actor to be cast in a leading role in a mainstream film, appearing in the 1914 film Uncle Tom's Cabin.[5][13] The Peter P. Jones Film Company was established in Chicago and filmed vaudeville acts as well as the 1915 National Half Century Exposition and Lincoln Jubilee.[citation needed]

William D. Foster's The Foster Photoplay Company in Chicago was one of the earliest studios to feature African Americans.[14][15] Casts for its films included performers from stage shows at Robert T. Motts' Pekin Theatre.[citation needed] Theatre companies the Lafayette Players and The Ethiopian Art Theatre also had several players who crossed over into filmmaking.[citation needed] REOL Productions was a New York City studio that produced films in the early 1920s with actors from the Lafayette Players.[citation needed] During its relatively short existence REOL produced a couple of documentaries, comedies, and a feature film.[16]

Lincoln Motion Picture Company was established in Omaha, Nebraska before relocating to Los Angeles, and was among the very first Black producers of African-American film.[17] Their mission statement was to "encourage black pride"with its "mostly family-oriented pictures."[17] The short-lived white-owned Ebony Film Corporation's was founded in 1915, but the white ownership's poor judgement about its stereotype-laden films aimed at both white and Black audiences led to a public outcry from Black audiences in the wake of divisive anger about The Birth of a Nation.[18] The company shut its doors in 1919, as a result.[18] Norman Studios, founded in 1920 in Jacksonville, Florida, produced drama films with African American casts, even though Norman, himself, was white.[18] Between 1920 and 1928, however, he made a string of successful films, starring Black actors.[18]

Biograph made a series of comedy shorts with comedian Bert Williams.[citation needed]

Documentary shorts (1909–1913) edit

Some of the earliest African American films were later classified by scholars as "Uplift Cinema", referencing writer-educator Booker T. Washington's influential uplift movement, which took shape at Tuskegee Institute, an early Post Civil War teacher-training college in Alabama for newly freed slaves. Under his leadership, the college produced several documentary shorts, as a way to promote the institute and build support among the school's benefactors.[19] Their first promotional documentary was 1909's A Trip to Tuskegee (1909) followed in 1913 by A Day at Tuskegee.[19] That same year, Samuel Chapman Armstrong's Post Civil War Hampton Institute, which focused on "manual labor and self-help,"[20] took a page from Washington's book and created its own narrative documentary John Henry at Hampton: A Kind of Student Who Makes Good, specifically to appeal to Northern donors.[20][21]

 
Booker T. Washington's uplift movement led to Uplift Cinema, another way of describing Race Films. Photographed by Frances Benjamin Johnston, c. 1895.
 
A newspaper ad for The Homesteader (1919) a lost black-and-white silent race film by filmmaker Oscar Micheaux.

Race film (1915–1950s) edit

Beginning in 1915, and continuing on until the 1950s, African-American production companies partnered with independent film companies to create "race films," a term that describes movies with African-American casts targeted at poor, and primarily Southern, African-American audiences by African-American producers working on much tighter budgets than their Hollywood rivals.[22]

Race films typically emphasized self-improvement and middle-class values, while also "foster[ing] an entire generation of independent African American filmmakers and helped establish a 'Black cinema' in America, an artform and system where Black directors were empowered to be independent — raising money, shooting and editing, and scoring films themselves."[8] Nearly 500 were made in the United States between 1915 and 1952, and most were shown in the southeastern United States where there were more theaters serving African Americans.[22][23]

Early stars of the genre included future Oscar winner Hattie McDaniel and the actor, singer and political activist Paul Robeson, who would later be blacklisted during the McCarthy era. Novelist Oscar Micheaux adapted one of his novels for his first film The Homesteader, in 1919, which is credited as one of the earliest race films. Micheaux's second film Within Our Gates, released in 1920, was like all race films, a response to racism, and in this case the racism in D. W. Griffith's divisive 1915 film The Birth of a Nation.[24] Micheaux would go on to write, produce and direct "forty-four feature-length films between 1919 and 1948," leading the Producers Guild of America to call him "The most prolific black — if not most prolific independent — filmmaker in American cinema."[25]

Talkies and musicals (1920s–1940s) edit

Early filmmakers sometimes served in multiple roles as actor, director and producer. Spencer Williams, who later starred in Amos 'n' Andy, wrote and directed films.[citation needed] His Amegro Films produced the 1941 film The Blood of Jesus.[citation needed] Novelist-turned-filmmaker Oscar Micheaux who worked in silent film, and later became a prominent director and producer in talkies.[8] William D. Alexander, known for his government-sponsored newsreels aimed at African American audiences early in his career, also became an influential African-American filmmaker.[citation needed]

 
Poster advertising The Blood of Jesus, directed by Spencer Williams Jr., which Time magazine called one of the 25 most important race films, and was later added to the U.S. National Film Registry.

Major distributors included Toddy Pictures Corporation, which acquired and re-released earlier films under new titles and advertising campaigns and, briefly, Million Dollar Productions, which featured a partnership with African American star Ralph Cooper.[26][27]

Musical films captured various African-American acts and performers on film. Known as soundies, they were a precursor to music videos, which were often cut from them and then released between the years 1940 and 1946.[28] They featured an enormous range of musical styles and "cheesecake" performances, as well as musicians both white and Black, including singer, dancer and actress Dorothy Dandridge, who would later become the first Black Oscar nominee.[29] Comic actor Stepin Fetchit who was the first Black actor to earn a million dollars, and is controversial for his demeaning portrayal of Black subservience, also appeared in them.[citation needed] Jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong, who went on to make 20 feature films between the 1930s and 1960s, made soundies too.[30][31][32]

Other Black actors famous for their song-and-dance chops include tap dancer, singer and actor Bill "Bojangles" Robinson, who also performed in Shirley Temple films.[33] Singer, dancer and actor Lena Horne, often recognized for her rendition of Stormy Weather in the 1943 musical of the same name, was also the first Black actress signed to a studio contract.[34] Among the most prominent early actress was Oscar winner Hattie McDaniel who won Best Supporting Actress for her role in the 1939 film Gone with the Wind.[citation needed]

Civil Rights era edit

 
Movie star Sidney Poitier in A Raisin in the Sun, 1959
 
Poster for the independent film Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song, 1971

First movie star (1950s–1970s) edit

In the 1950s and 60s, Sidney Poitier became the first Black movie star and the first Black male actor to win the Oscar in a competitive race for Lilies of the Field (1963), one of many acclaimed films in long filmography that includes an Oscar nod for The Defiant Ones (1958), which emphasized racial harmony as a means to an end, In the Heat of the Night (1967), a crime drama that focused on the uneasy partnership that develops between a bigoted white Southern police chief (played by Rod Steiger) whom Poitier famously slaps, and Guess Who's Coming to Dinner? (1967) a box office hit, co-starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn as the liberal parents of Poitier's white fiancée, uneasy about their engagement.[35] In the early 1970s, Poitier turned to directing, only to later return to the screen to portray Thurgood Marshall in Separate but Equal (1991) and Nelson Mandela in Mandela and de Klerk (1997). In 2009, Poitier was awarded the U.S. Presidential Medal of Freedom.[36]

Blaxploitation (1971–1979) edit

Blaxploitation films are a subset of exploitation films, a term derived from the film marketing term emphasizing the promotion of a brand-name star, a trending topic or titilliating subject matter — in short, a nearly surefire draw at the box office.[37] Both exploitation and blaxploitation films, which are sometimes also called "grindhouse," "cult" or "trash" films are low-budget B-movies, designed to turn a profit.[38]

The 1970s Black variant sought to tell Black stories with Black actors to Black audiences, but they were usually not produced by African Americans. As Junius Griffin, the president of the Hollywood branch of the NAACP, wrote in a New York Times op-ed in 1972: "At present, Black movies are a 'rip off' enriching major white film producers and a very few black people."[39]

Directors in the Civil Rights Era
 
Film director Gordon Parks in 1963
 
Director Ivan Dixon in 1967

Also considered exploitative because of the many stereotypes they relied on, Blaxploitation films typically took place in stereotypically urban environments, African-American characters were frequently charged with overcoming "The Man," which is to say white oppressors, and violence and sex often featured prominently.[37] Despite these tropes, Blaxploitation film was also recognized for portraying Black people as the heroes and subjects of their own stories, and for being the first genre of film to feature funk and soul music on their soundtracks.[40]

Two films, both released in 1971, are said to have invented the genre: Melvin Van Peebles' Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song, about a poor Black man fleeing the white police, and featuring a soundtrack by Earth, Wind & Fire was one. Director Gordon Parks' criminal action movie Shaft, featured a theme song that later won for the Academy Award for Best Original Song for the movie's theme song, which later appeared on multiple Top 100 lists, including AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs was the other.[24]

Other notable films in the genre include Ivan Dixon's first feature film the 1972 thriller Trouble Man, which featured a soundtrack by Marvin Gaye; and Bill Gunn's 1973 experimental horror film Ganja & Hess, later remade by Spike Lee in 2014 as Da Sweet Blood of Jesus.[24]

If Van Peebles and Parks' films made the genre's quintessential films, then Pam Grier was the genre's quintessential actress. Later described by director Quentin Tarantino as cinema's first female action star, Grier was "part of a small group of women who defined the genre", going from bit parts in films such as the satirical melodrama Beyond the Valley of the Dolls to featured roles in movies such as 1973's horror film Scream Blacula Scream and 1973's Coffy, in which she played a vengeful nurse.[41]

L.A. Rebellion (1960s–1980s) edit

 
Film director Julie Dash in 2020

The L.A. Rebellion film movement, also known as the "Los Angeles School of Black Filmmakers", or the UCLA Rebellion, refers to several dozen young African and African-American filmmakers who studied at UCLA Film School for the 20-year span between the late 1960s to the late 1980s, who went on to create independent Black art house film to provides an alternative to classical Hollywood cinema.[42]

Typically featuring working-class protagonists from communities in need, films such as Charles Burnett's 1978 feature Killer of Sheep have been hailed as a landmark, though until recently many have been hard to find.[43] Julie Dash's 1991 Daughters of the Dust, on the other hand, was the first full-length feature directed by a Black woman that was distributed nation-wide.[44]

Both films are informed by the greater context of the L.A. Rebellion's early days: Adamantly anti-Hollywood, and committed to storytelling based on authentic experience, the L.A. Rebellion was formed soon after the 1965 Watts riots, unrest after a 1969 shoot-out on the UCLA campus, anti-Vietnam and Black Power Movement struggles, which led several students to persuade the university to "launch an ethnographic studies programme responsive to local communities of colour.... The films that followed ... were forged in solidarity with anti-colonial movements from around the world, such as Brazil's Cinema Novo and the Argentinian Grupo Cine Liberación."[42][45]

Although most films like Burnett's were never widely seen, a resurgence of interest in the radical filmmaking movement led to a 2011 retrospective at the UCLA Hammar Museum, a 2015 retrospective at the Tate Modern, and a 2015 book published by UCLA called L.A. Rebellion: Creating a New Black Cinema.[46][45][42][47]

Contemporary edit

Cult classics (1980s) edit

 
Director Spike Lee in 2007

In between the music and the drama, 1980s film was frequently comic, launching Eddie Murphy's blockbuster film career. In 1987, actor, comedian, and director Robert Townsend's 1987 film Hollywood Shuffle, satirized the Hollywood film industry and its treatment of African Americans and created a buzz.[48] In 1982, Eddie Murphy made the buddy comedy 48 Hrs, which The New York Times called "positively witty".[49] In 1983, he made another hit in Trading Places with Dan Aykroyd.[50]

In 1984, already a proven box-office draw, Murphy left Saturday Night Live, and launched a successful full-time career, with his first solo leading role in Beverly Hills Cop, which went on to have two sequels.[51] In 1988, he made the silly romantic comedy Coming to America (which led to the less well-received sequel Coming 2 America in 2021), and in 1989 he made the comedy-drama crime film Harlem Nights, starring as part of a multi-generational comedy team that included legendary stand-ups Richard Pryor and Redd Foxx.[52]

In 1984, Prince's rock musical drama Purple Rain, which featured an Oscar-winning soundtrack, as well as an album by the same name launched him as a superstar. In full-time filmmaking 1986 black-and-white comedy drama She's Gotta Have It launched Spike Lee into a three-decade plus career and counting. More than 20 years later, his first film was relaunched and reimagined as a two-season 2016 TV series by the same name.[52] Lee ended the decade with 1989's Do the Right Thing, whose story exploring racial tension and simmering violence earned him both critical and commercial accolades, and may still be his most famous film.[52]

First Black matinee idol (1980s-2000s) edit

 
Matinee idol Denzel Washington in 1990
 
Director Cheryl Dunye in 2016

The late 1980s also marked the rise of actor Denzel Washington. He portrayed political activist Steve Biko in the 1987 film Cry Freedom, the title role In Spike Lee's 1992 Malcolm X and several other iconic figures. His won Best Supporting Actor for playing doomed Union Army soldier in the historical drama Glory (1989).[53] Washington would go on to win 17 NAACP Image Awards, three Golden Globes, on Tony Award and a second Academy Award in 2001 for playing the corrupt detective in Antoine Fuqua's thriller Training Day.[53]

In 2020, The New York Times ranked him as the greatest actor of the twenty-first century. In 2002, Washington made his directorial debut with the biographical film Antwone Fisher. His second directorial effort was The Great Debaters (2007). His third film, Fences (2016), in which he also starred, was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.[citation needed]

Breakthrough years (1990s) edit

The Guardian newspaper's Steve Rose noted in 2016 that "The late 80s and 90s [also] heralded a breakthrough led by Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing and John Singleton's Boyz N the Hood."[54] IndieWire calls the 1990s, in particular, "a period that witnessed a historic number of films made by African American directors who forever altered what we thought of as "black aesthetics" and who created touchstone works that continue to inspire contemporary filmmakers," crediting John Singleton's Boyz N the Hood (1991), which explores the challenges of ghetto life, Julie Dash's Daughters of the Dust about three generations of Gullah (1991), Kasi Lemmons' Eve's Bayou about the repercussions of a parent's affair and Cheryl Dunye's romantic dramedy Watermelon Woman (1996) as groundbreakers for their ambition and diversity of genre and style.[55] Many also praise Spike Lee's Malcolm X (1992) as the biopic of the decade for its complexity and its frank politics, which began the film with a videotape of the brutal police beating of Rodney King, which sparked off the 1992 Los Angeles riots.[54][56]

Auteurs and Oscars (2000s–present) edit

Spike Lee has built a body of work that predominantly uses Black casts, and tends to explore socio-political themes that range from women's sexual liberation in She's Gotta Have It (1986) to hate groups in the Oscar-winning Black Kkklansman (2018) more than 20 years later. Where Lee is squarely political, other contemporary filmmakers nowadays rely on political subtext hidden in plain sight. Jordan Peele's blockbuster horror film Get Out (2017) was also interpreted as a parable of Black dystopia, and Ryan Coogler's blockbuster Black Panther (2018) was interpreted as a model of Black utopia.[citation needed]

African-American women and African-American gay and lesbian women have also made advances directing films, in Radha Blank's comic The 40-Year-Old Version (2020), Ava DuVernay's fanciful rendition of the children's classic A Wrinkle in Time[1][57] or Angela Robinson's short film D.E.B.S. (2003) turned feature-length adaptation in 2004.

 
Director Jordan Peele in 2019
 
Director Tyler Perry in 2016

Director Tim Story is best known for comedies such as Barbershop (2002), the superhero film Fantastic Four (2005) and Ride Along, a buddy comedy franchise. He has been nominated for two NAACP Image Awards for Outstanding Directing in a Feature Film/Television Movie in 2006 and 2013.[citation needed]

Hollywood South edit

In the early 2000s, prolific Black filmmaker Tyler Perry began making movies. The films are often loathed by critics,[58] and beloved by audiences. They mostly target Black audiences with slapstick farces that have earned him a loyal following and helped him build his Atlanta-based movie studio.[59] Forbes describes Tyler Perry in a headline that says: "From 'Poor as Hell' to Billionaire: How Tyler Perry Changed Show Business Forever."[59] "In 2007, the film industry spent $93 million on productions in Georgia. In 2016, it spent over $2 billion."[60][61] He was awarded the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the 2021 Oscars ceremony, recognizing him as an "individual in the motion picture industry whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry," both for his personal generosity and his ingenuity, which extended to creating a "Camp Quarantine" to keep industry regulars employed during the Pandemic.[58][62]

Controversies and criticism edit

Awards shows and membership in film associations have been criticized for largely excluding people of color, as have several recent films. Cultural critic Wesley Morris described The Help (2011) as "an owner's manual," noting that "[t]he best film roles three Black women will have all year require one of them to clean Ron Howard's daughter's house.[63] Earlier films like The Green Mile (1999) and The Legend of Bagger Vance (2000), where a Black character's sole function was to help white people, were similarly criticized.[citation needed]

Gallery of pioneers edit

(Selection was limited by availability.)

Gallery of Oscar winners edit

(Selection was limited by availability.)

Theorists, critics and historians edit

Film critics edit

Academics and authors edit

Archives and collections edit

In the 1980s, G. William Jones led a restoration of early African American films, and Southern Methodist University has a collection named for him.[24] Kino Lorber produced the Pioneers of African-American Cinema (2015) box set.[24] Other notable collections include:

External links edit

  • African American Home Movie Archive
  • African American Film Critics Association (AAFCA)
  • Black Film Center/Archive, Indiana University, Bloomington
  • The Black Film Critics Circle
  • UCLA Film and Television Archive: African American Film and Television

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Diawara, Manthia, ed. (1993). Black American Cinema. AFI Film Readers. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-90397-4.
  • Gillespie, Michael Boyce (2016). Film Blackness: American Cinema and the Idea of Black Film. Duke University Press Books. ISBN 978-0-8223-6226-5.
  • Cripps, Thomas (1978). Black Film as Genre. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-37502-5.
  • Cripps, Thomas (1977). Slow Fade to Black: The Negro in American Film, 1900–1942. Oxford University Press. ASIN B019NE3UPK.
  • Reid, Mark A. (1993). Redefining Black Film. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07902-1.
  • Yearwood, Gladstone Lloyd (1999). Black Film as a Signifying Practice: Cinema, Narration and the African American Aesthetic Tradition. Africa World Press. ISBN 978-0-86543-715-9.

References edit

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  60. ^ "Tyler Perry sends a stereotype to the slammer". The Denver Post. February 12, 2009. Retrieved March 3, 2021.
  61. ^ "How Georgia Became the Hollywood of the South". Time. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  62. ^ "How Tyler Perry's 'camp quarantine' fended off the pandemic during filming of 'Sistas'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 27, 2021.
  63. ^ Morris, Wesley (August 10, 2011). "The Help". Boston.com. Retrieved March 3, 2021.
  64. ^ Afi, American Film; Gevinson, Alan; Institute, American Film (1997). Within Our Gates: Ethnicity in American Feature Films, 1911–1960. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-20964-0.
  65. ^ Heltzel, Bill (March 23, 2020). "Rhinebeck collector sued for $1.1M over sale of rare Separate Cinema Archive". Westfair Communications. Retrieved June 4, 2021.
  66. ^ "Black Film Promotional Material Collection, 1915–1980 | WUA University Archives". archon.wulib.wustl.edu. Retrieved June 4, 2021.

External links edit

Blaxpoitation edit

  • Museum of Uncut Funk for more information on the Blaxpoitation movement

Overview edit

  • Buzzfeed's 70 Classic Black Films Everyone Should See
  • The Guardian on why Black films matter
  • The New Republic on Black Cinema Matters
  • The New York Times 28 Great Films for Black History Month
  • Rotten Tomatoes on The 115 Best Black Movies of the 21st Century

Posters and still images edit

  • Separate Cinema: 100 Years of Black Poster Art and HuffPost's excerpts from the book
  • Still images tracing the history of film at Stacker's The History of Black Representation on Film

Race Films edit

  • Early African American Film: Reconstructing the History of Silent Race Films, 1909–1930: A database on early African-American silent race films.
  • Rotten Tomatoes on "Race Films: The Black Film Industry that Told Black Stories In Cinema's Earliest Days"
  • Internet Archive version of William D. Alexander's 1949 race film Souls of Sin

Black women pioneers edit

  • A website for Sisters in Cinema Documentary: A History of African American Women Feature Film Directors
  • Columbia University on Women Film Pioneer Project: African-American Women in the Silent Film Industry
  • The Atlantic on When Hollywood's Power Players Were Women
  • Greenlight Women on Celebrating Black Female Directors and Actresses over 40

african, american, cinema, also, black, film, loosely, classified, films, made, about, black, americans, historically, african, american, films, have, been, made, with, african, american, casts, marketed, african, american, audiences, production, team, directo. See also Black film African American cinema is loosely classified as films made by for or about Black Americans 1 Historically African American films have been made with African American casts and marketed to African American audiences 1 The production team and director were sometimes also African American 2 More recently Black films featuring multicultural casts aimed at multicultural audiences have also included American Blackness as an essential aspect of the storyline 1 2 3 Three Film PioneersOscar Micheaux is considered the first major African American feature filmmaker He made his first film in 1919 and 44 films later his last in 1948 Maria P Williams is considered the first Black woman film producer for the 5 reel silent drama based on her own screenplay for Flames of Wrath in 1923 Lester Walton started writing film criticism in 1908 for the national mainstream Black newspaper New York Age His reviews and insights remain foundational for subsequent Black film literature Segregation discrimination issues of representation derogatory stereotypes and tired tropes have dogged Black American cinema from the start of a century plus history that roughly coincided with the century plus history of American cinema 4 5 From the very earliest days of moving pictures major studios used Black actors to appeal to Black audiences while also often relegating them to bit parts casting women as maids or nannies and men as natives or servants 6 or either gender as a magical negro an update on the noble savage Black filmmakers producers critics and others have resisted narrow archetypes and offensive representation in many ways As early as 1909 Lester A Walton the arts critic for New York Age was making sophisticated arguments against the objectification of Black bodies onscreen pointing out that anti Negro propaganda strikes at the very roots of the fundamental principles of democracy 7 Noting the educational impact film could have he also argued that it could be used to emancipate the white American from his peculiar ideas which were hurtful to both races 7 The race films of 1915 to the mid 1950s followed a similar spirit of racial uplift and educational counter programing with an eye to combating the racism of the Jim Crow south 8 That sensibility shifted markedly in the 1960s and 70s Although Blaxploitation films continued to include stereotypical characters they were also praised for portraying Black people as the heroes and subjects of their own stories 9 By the 1980s auteurs like Spike Lee and John Singleton created nuanced depictions of Black lives which led the way for later filmmakers like Jordan Peele and Ava DuVernay to use a range of genres horror history documentary fantasy to explore Black lives from multiple perspectives Ryan Coogler s 2018 blockbuster superhero film Black Panther has also been widely praised for creating a fully realized Afrocentric urban utopia of Black people that include a foundation myth a legendary hero and takes utter delight in its African ness 10 Contents 1 History 1 1 Documentary shorts 1909 1913 1 2 Race film 1915 1950s 1 3 Talkies and musicals 1920s 1940s 2 Civil Rights era 2 1 First movie star 1950s 1970s 2 2 Blaxploitation 1971 1979 2 3 L A Rebellion 1960s 1980s 3 Contemporary 3 1 Cult classics 1980s 3 2 First Black matinee idol 1980s 2000s 3 3 Breakthrough years 1990s 3 4 Auteurs and Oscars 2000s present 3 5 Hollywood South 4 Controversies and criticism 5 Gallery of pioneers 6 Gallery of Oscar winners 7 Theorists critics and historians 7 1 Film critics 7 2 Academics and authors 8 Archives and collections 9 External links 10 See also 11 Bibliography 12 References 13 External links 13 1 Blaxpoitation 13 2 Overview 13 3 Posters and still images 13 4 Race Films 13 5 Black women pioneersHistory editThe short film Something Good Negro Kiss was made in 1898 Early commercial films often depicted minstrel shows until vaudeville acts overtook them in popularity 3 11 An African American appeared in narrative film at least as early as 1909 which is also the year that Siegmund Lubin produced the comedy series using a Black cast with the derogatory title Sambo Before then film roles for Black actors were played by white actors in blackface 12 Sam Lucas became the first Black actor to be cast in a leading role in a mainstream film appearing in the 1914 film Uncle Tom s Cabin 5 13 The Peter P Jones Film Company was established in Chicago and filmed vaudeville acts as well as the 1915 National Half Century Exposition and Lincoln Jubilee citation needed William D Foster s The Foster Photoplay Company in Chicago was one of the earliest studios to feature African Americans 14 15 Casts for its films included performers from stage shows at Robert T Motts Pekin Theatre citation needed Theatre companies the Lafayette Players and The Ethiopian Art Theatre also had several players who crossed over into filmmaking citation needed REOL Productions was a New York City studio that produced films in the early 1920s with actors from the Lafayette Players citation needed During its relatively short existence REOL produced a couple of documentaries comedies and a feature film 16 Lincoln Motion Picture Company was established in Omaha Nebraska before relocating to Los Angeles and was among the very first Black producers of African American film 17 Their mission statement was to encourage black pride with its mostly family oriented pictures 17 The short lived white owned Ebony Film Corporation s was founded in 1915 but the white ownership s poor judgement about its stereotype laden films aimed at both white and Black audiences led to a public outcry from Black audiences in the wake of divisive anger about The Birth of a Nation 18 The company shut its doors in 1919 as a result 18 Norman Studios founded in 1920 in Jacksonville Florida produced drama films with African American casts even though Norman himself was white 18 Between 1920 and 1928 however he made a string of successful films starring Black actors 18 Biograph made a series of comedy shorts with comedian Bert Williams citation needed Documentary shorts 1909 1913 edit Some of the earliest African American films were later classified by scholars as Uplift Cinema referencing writer educator Booker T Washington s influential uplift movement which took shape at Tuskegee Institute an early Post Civil War teacher training college in Alabama for newly freed slaves Under his leadership the college produced several documentary shorts as a way to promote the institute and build support among the school s benefactors 19 Their first promotional documentary was 1909 s A Trip to Tuskegee 1909 followed in 1913 by A Day at Tuskegee 19 That same year Samuel Chapman Armstrong s Post Civil War Hampton Institute which focused on manual labor and self help 20 took a page from Washington s book and created its own narrative documentary John Henry at Hampton A Kind of Student Who Makes Good specifically to appeal to Northern donors 20 21 nbsp Booker T Washington s uplift movement led to Uplift Cinema another way of describing Race Films Photographed by Frances Benjamin Johnston c 1895 nbsp A newspaper ad for The Homesteader 1919 a lost black and white silent race film by filmmaker Oscar Micheaux Race film 1915 1950s edit See also Race film Beginning in 1915 and continuing on until the 1950s African American production companies partnered with independent film companies to create race films a term that describes movies with African American casts targeted at poor and primarily Southern African American audiences by African American producers working on much tighter budgets than their Hollywood rivals 22 Race films typically emphasized self improvement and middle class values while also foster ing an entire generation of independent African American filmmakers and helped establish a Black cinema in America an artform and system where Black directors were empowered to be independent raising money shooting and editing and scoring films themselves 8 Nearly 500 were made in the United States between 1915 and 1952 and most were shown in the southeastern United States where there were more theaters serving African Americans 22 23 Early stars of the genre included future Oscar winner Hattie McDaniel and the actor singer and political activist Paul Robeson who would later be blacklisted during the McCarthy era Novelist Oscar Micheaux adapted one of his novels for his first film The Homesteader in 1919 which is credited as one of the earliest race films Micheaux s second film Within Our Gates released in 1920 was like all race films a response to racism and in this case the racism in D W Griffith s divisive 1915 film The Birth of a Nation 24 Micheaux would go on to write produce and direct forty four feature length films between 1919 and 1948 leading the Producers Guild of America to call him The most prolific black if not most prolific independent filmmaker in American cinema 25 Talkies and musicals 1920s 1940s edit Early filmmakers sometimes served in multiple roles as actor director and producer Spencer Williams who later starred in Amos n Andy wrote and directed films citation needed His Amegro Films produced the 1941 film The Blood of Jesus citation needed Novelist turned filmmaker Oscar Micheaux who worked in silent film and later became a prominent director and producer in talkies 8 William D Alexander known for his government sponsored newsreels aimed at African American audiences early in his career also became an influential African American filmmaker citation needed nbsp Poster advertising The Blood of Jesus directed by Spencer Williams Jr which Time magazine called one of the 25 most important race films and was later added to the U S National Film Registry Major distributors included Toddy Pictures Corporation which acquired and re released earlier films under new titles and advertising campaigns and briefly Million Dollar Productions which featured a partnership with African American star Ralph Cooper 26 27 Musical films captured various African American acts and performers on film Known as soundies they were a precursor to music videos which were often cut from them and then released between the years 1940 and 1946 28 They featured an enormous range of musical styles and cheesecake performances as well as musicians both white and Black including singer dancer and actress Dorothy Dandridge who would later become the first Black Oscar nominee 29 Comic actor Stepin Fetchit who was the first Black actor to earn a million dollars and is controversial for his demeaning portrayal of Black subservience also appeared in them citation needed Jazz trumpeter Louis Armstrong who went on to make 20 feature films between the 1930s and 1960s made soundies too 30 31 32 Other Black actors famous for their song and dance chops include tap dancer singer and actor Bill Bojangles Robinson who also performed in Shirley Temple films 33 Singer dancer and actor Lena Horne often recognized for her rendition of Stormy Weather in the 1943 musical of the same name was also the first Black actress signed to a studio contract 34 Among the most prominent early actress was Oscar winner Hattie McDaniel who won Best Supporting Actress for her role in the 1939 film Gone with the Wind citation needed Civil Rights era edit nbsp Movie star Sidney Poitier in A Raisin in the Sun 1959 nbsp Poster for the independent film Sweet Sweetback s Baadasssss Song 1971 First movie star 1950s 1970s edit In the 1950s and 60s Sidney Poitier became the first Black movie star and the first Black male actor to win the Oscar in a competitive race for Lilies of the Field 1963 one of many acclaimed films in long filmography that includes an Oscar nod for The Defiant Ones 1958 which emphasized racial harmony as a means to an end In the Heat of the Night 1967 a crime drama that focused on the uneasy partnership that develops between a bigoted white Southern police chief played by Rod Steiger whom Poitier famously slaps and Guess Who s Coming to Dinner 1967 a box office hit co starring Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn as the liberal parents of Poitier s white fiancee uneasy about their engagement 35 In the early 1970s Poitier turned to directing only to later return to the screen to portray Thurgood Marshall in Separate but Equal 1991 and Nelson Mandela in Mandela and de Klerk 1997 In 2009 Poitier was awarded the U S Presidential Medal of Freedom 36 Blaxploitation 1971 1979 edit See also Blaxploitation Blaxploitation films are a subset of exploitation films a term derived from the film marketing term emphasizing the promotion of a brand name star a trending topic or titilliating subject matter in short a nearly surefire draw at the box office 37 Both exploitation and blaxploitation films which are sometimes also called grindhouse cult or trash films are low budget B movies designed to turn a profit 38 The 1970s Black variant sought to tell Black stories with Black actors to Black audiences but they were usually not produced by African Americans As Junius Griffin the president of the Hollywood branch of the NAACP wrote in a New York Times op ed in 1972 At present Black movies are a rip off enriching major white film producers and a very few black people 39 Directors in the Civil Rights Era nbsp Film director Gordon Parks in 1963 nbsp Director Ivan Dixon in 1967 Also considered exploitative because of the many stereotypes they relied on Blaxploitation films typically took place in stereotypically urban environments African American characters were frequently charged with overcoming The Man which is to say white oppressors and violence and sex often featured prominently 37 Despite these tropes Blaxploitation film was also recognized for portraying Black people as the heroes and subjects of their own stories and for being the first genre of film to feature funk and soul music on their soundtracks 40 Two films both released in 1971 are said to have invented the genre Melvin Van Peebles Sweet Sweetback s Baadasssss Song about a poor Black man fleeing the white police and featuring a soundtrack by Earth Wind amp Fire was one Director Gordon Parks criminal action movie Shaft featured a theme song that later won for the Academy Award for Best Original Song for the movie s theme song which later appeared on multiple Top 100 lists including AFI s 100 Years 100 Songs was the other 24 Other notable films in the genre include Ivan Dixon s first feature film the 1972 thriller Trouble Man which featured a soundtrack by Marvin Gaye and Bill Gunn s 1973 experimental horror film Ganja amp Hess later remade by Spike Lee in 2014 as Da Sweet Blood of Jesus 24 If Van Peebles and Parks films made the genre s quintessential films then Pam Grier was the genre s quintessential actress Later described by director Quentin Tarantino as cinema s first female action star Grier was part of a small group of women who defined the genre going from bit parts in films such as the satirical melodrama Beyond the Valley of the Dolls to featured roles in movies such as 1973 s horror film Scream Blacula Scream and 1973 s Coffy in which she played a vengeful nurse 41 L A Rebellion 1960s 1980s edit nbsp Film director Julie Dash in 2020The L A Rebellion film movement also known as the Los Angeles School of Black Filmmakers or the UCLA Rebellion refers to several dozen young African and African American filmmakers who studied at UCLA Film School for the 20 year span between the late 1960s to the late 1980s who went on to create independent Black art house film to provides an alternative to classical Hollywood cinema 42 Typically featuring working class protagonists from communities in need films such as Charles Burnett s 1978 feature Killer of Sheep have been hailed as a landmark though until recently many have been hard to find 43 Julie Dash s 1991 Daughters of the Dust on the other hand was the first full length feature directed by a Black woman that was distributed nation wide 44 Both films are informed by the greater context of the L A Rebellion s early days Adamantly anti Hollywood and committed to storytelling based on authentic experience the L A Rebellion was formed soon after the 1965 Watts riots unrest after a 1969 shoot out on the UCLA campus anti Vietnam and Black Power Movement struggles which led several students to persuade the university to launch an ethnographic studies programme responsive to local communities of colour The films that followed were forged in solidarity with anti colonial movements from around the world such as Brazil s Cinema Novo and the Argentinian Grupo Cine Liberacion 42 45 Although most films like Burnett s were never widely seen a resurgence of interest in the radical filmmaking movement led to a 2011 retrospective at the UCLA Hammar Museum a 2015 retrospective at the Tate Modern and a 2015 book published by UCLA called L A Rebellion Creating a New Black Cinema 46 45 42 47 Contemporary editSee also Afrofuturism and Hood film Cult classics 1980s edit nbsp Director Spike Lee in 2007In between the music and the drama 1980s film was frequently comic launching Eddie Murphy s blockbuster film career In 1987 actor comedian and director Robert Townsend s 1987 film Hollywood Shuffle satirized the Hollywood film industry and its treatment of African Americans and created a buzz 48 In 1982 Eddie Murphy made the buddy comedy 48 Hrs which The New York Times called positively witty 49 In 1983 he made another hit in Trading Places with Dan Aykroyd 50 In 1984 already a proven box office draw Murphy left Saturday Night Live and launched a successful full time career with his first solo leading role in Beverly Hills Cop which went on to have two sequels 51 In 1988 he made the silly romantic comedy Coming to America which led to the less well received sequel Coming 2 America in 2021 and in 1989 he made the comedy drama crime film Harlem Nights starring as part of a multi generational comedy team that included legendary stand ups Richard Pryor and Redd Foxx 52 In 1984 Prince s rock musical drama Purple Rain which featured an Oscar winning soundtrack as well as an album by the same name launched him as a superstar In full time filmmaking 1986 black and white comedy drama She s Gotta Have It launched Spike Lee into a three decade plus career and counting More than 20 years later his first film was relaunched and reimagined as a two season 2016 TV series by the same name 52 Lee ended the decade with 1989 s Do the Right Thing whose story exploring racial tension and simmering violence earned him both critical and commercial accolades and may still be his most famous film 52 First Black matinee idol 1980s 2000s edit nbsp Matinee idol Denzel Washington in 1990 nbsp Director Cheryl Dunye in 2016 The late 1980s also marked the rise of actor Denzel Washington He portrayed political activist Steve Biko in the 1987 film Cry Freedom the title role In Spike Lee s 1992 Malcolm X and several other iconic figures His won Best Supporting Actor for playing doomed Union Army soldier in the historical drama Glory 1989 53 Washington would go on to win 17 NAACP Image Awards three Golden Globes on Tony Award and a second Academy Award in 2001 for playing the corrupt detective in Antoine Fuqua s thriller Training Day 53 In 2020 The New York Times ranked him as the greatest actor of the twenty first century In 2002 Washington made his directorial debut with the biographical film Antwone Fisher His second directorial effort was The Great Debaters 2007 His third film Fences 2016 in which he also starred was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture citation needed Breakthrough years 1990s edit The Guardian newspaper s Steve Rose noted in 2016 that The late 80s and 90s also heralded a breakthrough led by Spike Lee s Do the Right Thing and John Singleton s Boyz N the Hood 54 IndieWire calls the 1990s in particular a period that witnessed a historic number of films made by African American directors who forever altered what we thought of as black aesthetics and who created touchstone works that continue to inspire contemporary filmmakers crediting John Singleton s Boyz N the Hood 1991 which explores the challenges of ghetto life Julie Dash s Daughters of the Dust about three generations of Gullah 1991 Kasi Lemmons Eve s Bayou about the repercussions of a parent s affair and Cheryl Dunye s romantic dramedy Watermelon Woman 1996 as groundbreakers for their ambition and diversity of genre and style 55 Many also praise Spike Lee s Malcolm X 1992 as the biopic of the decade for its complexity and its frank politics which began the film with a videotape of the brutal police beating of Rodney King which sparked off the 1992 Los Angeles riots 54 56 Auteurs and Oscars 2000s present edit Spike Lee has built a body of work that predominantly uses Black casts and tends to explore socio political themes that range from women s sexual liberation in She s Gotta Have It 1986 to hate groups in the Oscar winning Black Kkklansman 2018 more than 20 years later Where Lee is squarely political other contemporary filmmakers nowadays rely on political subtext hidden in plain sight Jordan Peele s blockbuster horror film Get Out 2017 was also interpreted as a parable of Black dystopia and Ryan Coogler s blockbuster Black Panther 2018 was interpreted as a model of Black utopia citation needed African American women and African American gay and lesbian women have also made advances directing films in Radha Blank s comic The 40 Year Old Version 2020 Ava DuVernay s fanciful rendition of the children s classic A Wrinkle in Time 1 57 or Angela Robinson s short film D E B S 2003 turned feature length adaptation in 2004 nbsp Director Jordan Peele in 2019 nbsp Director Tyler Perry in 2016 Director Tim Story is best known for comedies such as Barbershop 2002 the superhero film Fantastic Four 2005 and Ride Along a buddy comedy franchise He has been nominated for two NAACP Image Awards for Outstanding Directing in a Feature Film Television Movie in 2006 and 2013 citation needed Hollywood South edit In the early 2000s prolific Black filmmaker Tyler Perry began making movies The films are often loathed by critics 58 and beloved by audiences They mostly target Black audiences with slapstick farces that have earned him a loyal following and helped him build his Atlanta based movie studio 59 Forbes describes Tyler Perry in a headline that says From Poor as Hell to Billionaire How Tyler Perry Changed Show Business Forever 59 In 2007 the film industry spent 93 million on productions in Georgia In 2016 it spent over 2 billion 60 61 He was awarded the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award at the 2021 Oscars ceremony recognizing him as an individual in the motion picture industry whose humanitarian efforts have brought credit to the industry both for his personal generosity and his ingenuity which extended to creating a Camp Quarantine to keep industry regulars employed during the Pandemic 58 62 Controversies and criticism editAwards shows and membership in film associations have been criticized for largely excluding people of color as have several recent films Cultural critic Wesley Morris described The Help 2011 as an owner s manual noting that t he best film roles three Black women will have all year require one of them to clean Ron Howard s daughter s house 63 Earlier films like The Green Mile 1999 and The Legend of Bagger Vance 2000 where a Black character s sole function was to help white people were similarly criticized citation needed Gallery of pioneers edit Selection was limited by availability nbsp Dorothy Dandridge 1922 1965 pictured in 1962 is the first Black Best Actress Oscar nominee for her role in 1954 s Carmen Jones with Harry Belafonte nbsp Herb Jeffries 1913 2014 pictured in 1944 debuted in 1937 s Harlem on the Prairie as the first Black singing cowboy in the first Black Western talkie with an all Black cast nbsp Sam Lucas 1848 1916 pictured in 1902 was the first Black man to portray the role of Uncle Tom on stage and screen nbsp Hattie McDaniel 1893 1952 pictured in 1939 was the first Black individual and the first woman to win the Oscar for her role in Gone with the Wind nbsp Oscar Micheaux 1884 1951 was both writer director and the first major Black filmmaker who made more than 40 films including adaptations from his own novels nbsp Stepin Fetchit ne Lincoln Perry 1902 1985 pictured in 1959 both criticized as a stereotype and praised as an archetype was the first Black actor to earn 1 million nbsp Sidney Poitier 1927 2022 pictured in 1963 was the first Black movie star and the first Black male winner of the Academy Award for Best Actor in 1964 nbsp Bill Bojangles Robinson 1878 1949 pictured in 1946 was an American tap dancer actor singer perhaps best known today for his Shirley Temple films For the first half of the 20th century however he was the most highly paid Black American entertainer in America nbsp Lester Walton 1882 1965 was a journalist sportswriter civil rights activist diplomat composer and theater owner But it s his writing on Black representation in film that made him one of African America s earliest and most influential critics nbsp Bert Williams 1874 1922 pictured in 1922 the comedian one of the most popular of his era is credited as the first Black man to have the leading role in a film in this case Darktown Jubilee in 1914 nbsp Spencer Williams 1893 1969 was a groundbreaking actor director filmmaker He portrayed Andy on the Amos n Andy TV show Alvin Childress is pictured with him above in 1952 He also directed the 1941 race film The Blood of Jesus nbsp Maria P Williams 1866 1932 was a teacher reporter actor and screenwriter but she is also credited as the first Black woman film producer for the five reel silent crime drama based on her own screenplay Flames of Wrath in 1923 64 Gallery of Oscar winners edit Selection was limited by availability See also List of African American actors and List of Black Academy Award winners and nominees Actors nbsp Actor and two time Academy Award winner Mahershala Ali in 2019 nbsp Actress and Academy Award winner Halle Berry in 2017 nbsp Viola Davis is the most nominated Black actress in Oscar history and won in 2016 nbsp Actress and Academy Award winner Ariana DeBose in 2022 nbsp Actor comedian and Academy Award winner Jamie Foxx in 2013 nbsp Actor and Academy Award winner Morgan Freeman in 1998 nbsp Comedian actress and EGOT winner Whoopi Goldberg in 2008 nbsp Actor and Academy Award winner Cuba Gooding Jr in 2000 nbsp Actor and Academy Award winner Louis Gossett Jr in 1987 nbsp Actress and Academy Award winner Jennifer Hudson in 2011 nbsp Actor and Academy Award winner Daniel Kaluuya in 2017 nbsp Actress and Academy Award winner Regina King in 2018 nbsp Actress and Academy Award winner Hattie McDaniel in 1939 nbsp Actress and Academy Award winner Mo Nique in 2010 nbsp Actress and Academy Award winner Lupita Nyong o in 2017 nbsp Actor and Academy Award winner Sidney Poitier in 1968 nbsp Actor and Academy Award winner Will Smith in 2019 nbsp Actress and Academy Award winner Octavia Spencer in 2016 nbsp Actor and Academy Award winner Denzel Washington in 2018 nbsp Actor and Academy Award winner Forest Whitaker in 2017Directors nbsp Director and Academy Award winner Barry Jenkins in 2009 nbsp Academy Award winning filmmaker Spike Lee in 2012 nbsp Director and Academy Award winner Steve McQueen at the Oscars in 2014 nbsp Director and Academy Award winner Jordan Peele in 2014Writers nbsp Writer and Academy Award winner Geoffrey Fletcher in 2010Theorists critics and historians editFilm critics edit Tony Langston at the Chicago Defender 1920s era Sylvester Russell at the Indianapolis Freeman 192os era D Ireland Thomas 1875 1955 Lester A Walton 1882 1965 at The New York Age Academics and authors edit Donald Bogle 1944 present Thomas Cripps 1932 2018 Phyllis R Klotman 1924 2015 Audrey Thomas McCluskey 1940s present Archives and collections editIn the 1980s G William Jones led a restoration of early African American films and Southern Methodist University has a collection named for him 24 Kino Lorber produced the Pioneers of African American Cinema 2015 box set 24 Other notable collections include Black Film Archive Black films from 1915 to 1979 The Library of Congress has African American films in its collection and some coverage of the films The Lucas Museum has acquired a collection of Black Films 65 Pioneers of African American Cinema 2015 The National Museum of African American History and Culture has film posters lobby cards and photographs in its collection WUA University has an international collection with a lot of material from American films 66 External links editAfrican American Home Movie Archive African American Film Critics Association AAFCA Black Film Center Archive Indiana University Bloomington The Black Film Critics Circle UCLA Film and Television Archive African American Film and TelevisionSee also edit nbsp Film portal nbsp United States portalBlack women film pioneers Black women filmmakers Cinema of the United States List of African American documentary films African American neighborhood List of Black films of the 2010s Hood film List of films about Black girlhood Pioneers of African American Cinema 2015 Bibliography editDiawara Manthia ed 1993 Black American Cinema AFI Film Readers Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 90397 4 Gillespie Michael Boyce 2016 Film Blackness American Cinema and the Idea of Black Film Duke University Press Books ISBN 978 0 8223 6226 5 Cripps Thomas 1978 Black Film as Genre Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 37502 5 Cripps Thomas 1977 Slow Fade to Black The Negro in American Film 1900 1942 Oxford University Press ASIN B019NE3UPK Reid Mark A 1993 Redefining Black Film University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07902 1 Yearwood Gladstone Lloyd 1999 Black Film as a Signifying Practice Cinema Narration and the African American Aesthetic Tradition Africa World Press ISBN 978 0 86543 715 9 References edit a b c d Johnson Allan October 19 2005 How do you define a black movie chicagotribune com Retrieved March 3 2021 a b Abuku NeNe October 5 2011 What is Black Cinema Have You Ever Wondered Grandmother Africa Retrieved March 6 2021 a b Burton Nsenga February 3 2010 Celebrating 100 Years of Black Cinema The Root Retrieved March 6 2021 Field Allyson Nadia March 3 2020 Black Cinema at Its Birth The Criterion Collection a b Hayward Susan April 18 2006 Cinema Studies The Key Concepts Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 20891 3 Black voices in silent cinema Sight amp Sound BFI a b Everett Anna 2000 Lester Walton s Ecriture Noir Black Spectatorial Transcodings of Cinematic Excess Cinema Journal 39 3 30 50 doi 10 1353 cj 2000 0008 ISSN 0009 7101 JSTOR 1225532 S2CID 194100364 a b c Miller Paul D January 31 2021 Race Films The Black Film Industry that Told Black Stories In Cinema s Earliest Days Retrieved April 10 2021 Blaxploitation The Museum Of UnCut Funk museumofuncutfunk com Retrieved March 6 2021 Barber Nicholas Black Panther The most radical Hollywood blockbuster ever BBC Retrieved March 6 2021 96 03 13 Black Actors inAmerican Cinema teachersinstitute yale edu Strausbaugh John 2006 Black Like You Blackface Whiteface Insult amp Imitation in American Popular Culture Penguin ISBN 978 1 58542 593 8 Berry S Torriano Berry Venise T May 7 2015 Historical Dictionary of African American Cinema Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 1 4422 4702 4 History earlyracefilm github io Retrieved April 18 2021 Burton Nsenga February 3 2010 Celebrating 100 Years of Black Cinema The Root Retrieved April 10 2021 Canvas Login a b Ho Ro February 21 2014 Lincoln Motion Picture Company 1st black owned film production company Originalpeople org Retrieved April 10 2021 a b c d The Rise and Fall of Ebony Films normanstudios org January 17 2017 Retrieved April 10 2021 a b Field Allyson Nadia 2015 To Show the Industrial Progress of the Negro Along Industrial Lines Uplift Cinema Entrepreneurs at Tuskegee Institute 1909 1913 Uplift Cinema The Emergence of African American Film and the Possibility of Black Modernity Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 7555 5 a b Allyson Nadia Field PhD 2009 John Henry Goes to Carnegie Hall Motion Picture Production at Southern Black Agricultural and Industrial Institutes 1909 13 Journal of Popular Film and Television 37 3 106 115 DOI 10 1080 01956050903218075 Hampton Institute Encyclopedia com encyclopedia com Retrieved April 18 2021 a b Negro Digest Negro Digest Publishing Company December 1 1945 via Google Books Clark Ashley February 12 2016 Second showing unearthing the lost history of African American cinema The Guardian a b c d e A short history of Black US indie cinema BFI Retrieved June 4 2021 NAACP NAACP History Oscar Micheaux NAACP Retrieved April 10 2021 Counter B Los Angeles Theatres Million Dollar Theatre history Los Angeles Theatres Retrieved April 10 2021 Toddy Pictures Company collection oac cdlib org Retrieved April 10 2021 Soundies UCLA Film amp Television Archive www cinema ucla edu Retrieved April 10 2021 Chilton Charlotte October 5 2020 Dorothy Dandridge s Life in Photos Harper s BAZAAR Retrieved April 10 2021 Stepin Fetchit was the first black actor to earn a million but at what cost History 101 Retrieved April 10 2021 Film Louis Armstrong Home Museum Retrieved April 10 2021 Ostwald David H August 3 1991 Opinion Louis Armstrong Civil Rights Pioneer The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 10 2021 Bill Bojangles Robinson The Stars Broadway The American Musical PBS Broadway The American Musical Retrieved April 10 2021 Lena Horne Lena Horne Biography American Masters PBS American Masters May 14 2010 Retrieved April 10 2021 Ebert Roger Guess Who s Coming to Dinner movie review 1968 Roger Ebert rogerebert com Retrieved April 19 2021 Sidney Poitier Biography Movies amp Facts Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved April 19 2021 a b INTRODUCTION The Grindhouse Cinema Database grindhousedatabase com Retrieved April 10 2021 Exploitation Film obo Retrieved April 10 2021 Griffin Junius December 17 1972 Article 1 No Title The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 10 2021 Black Power Blaxploitation amp The Sounds of the Seventies CrimeReads February 26 2020 Retrieved April 10 2021 Pam Grier s Best Blaxploitation Films Filthy Retrieved April 10 2021 a b c Rise Again The L A Rebellion UCLA Magazine Retrieved April 10 2021 Kenigsberg Ben June 11 2020 If You Want to Learn About the L A Rebellion Filmmakers Start Here The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 10 2021 Michel Martin November 20 2016 Daughters Of The Dust Re Released Following Attention From Beyonce NPR All Things Considered Retrieved February 7 2017 a b Clark Ashley April 9 2015 The LA rebellion when black film makers took on the world and won The Guardian Retrieved April 10 2021 Field Allyson Horak Jan Christopher Stewart Jacqueline Najuma November 2015 L A Rebellion Creating a New Black Cinema Univ of California Press ISBN 9780520284685 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help DVD Book UCLA Film amp Television Archive www cinema ucla edu Retrieved April 10 2021 Black films matter how African American cinema fought back against Hollywood The Guardian October 13 2016 Maslin Janet December 8 1982 NICK NOLTE AND EDDIE MURPHY IN 48 HOURS The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 19 2021 Ebert Roger Trading Places movie review amp film summary 1983 Roger Ebert rogerebert com Retrieved April 19 2021 Maslin Janet December 5 1984 FILM MURPHY IN BEVERLY HILLS COP The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 19 2021 a b c Vh1 February 17 2016 10 Black Cult Classic Movies of the 80s You Must See VH1 News Archived from the original on February 21 2016 Retrieved April 19 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b The Cine Files Denzel Washington Notes on the Construction of a Black Matinee Idol Retrieved August 25 2020 a b Black films matter how African American cinema fought back against Hollywood The Guardian October 13 2016 Retrieved April 10 2021 Obenson Tambay May 9 2019 10 Black Films From the 1990s That Changed American Cinema IndieWire Retrieved April 19 2021 Canby Vincent November 18 1992 Review Film Malcolm X as Complex as Its Subject The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 19 2021 24 Essential Works of Black Cinema Recommended by Black Directors September 3 2020 a b Harris Aisha April 25 2021 2021 Oscars Tyler Perry Accepts The Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award NPR Retrieved April 27 2021 a b Berg Madeline From Poor As Hell To Billionaire How Tyler Perry Changed Show Business Forever Forbes Retrieved February 23 2021 Tyler Perry sends a stereotype to the slammer The Denver Post February 12 2009 Retrieved March 3 2021 How Georgia Became the Hollywood of the South Time Retrieved April 18 2021 How Tyler Perry s camp quarantine fended off the pandemic during filming of Sistas Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 27 2021 Morris Wesley August 10 2011 The Help Boston com Retrieved March 3 2021 Afi American Film Gevinson Alan Institute American Film 1997 Within Our Gates Ethnicity in American Feature Films 1911 1960 University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20964 0 Heltzel Bill March 23 2020 Rhinebeck collector sued for 1 1M over sale of rare Separate Cinema Archive Westfair Communications Retrieved June 4 2021 Black Film Promotional Material Collection 1915 1980 WUA University Archives archon wulib wustl edu Retrieved June 4 2021 External links editBlaxpoitation edit Museum of Uncut Funk for more information on the Blaxpoitation movementOverview edit Buzzfeed s 70 Classic Black Films Everyone Should See The Guardian on why Black films matter The New Republic on Black Cinema Matters The New York Times 28 Great Films for Black History Month Rotten Tomatoes on The 115 Best Black Movies of the 21st CenturyPosters and still images edit Separate Cinema 100 Years of Black Poster Art and HuffPost s excerpts from the book Still images tracing the history of film at Stacker s The History of Black Representation on FilmRace Films edit Early African American Film Reconstructing the History of Silent Race Films 1909 1930 A database on early African American silent race films Rotten Tomatoes on Race Films The Black Film Industry that Told Black Stories In Cinema s Earliest Days Internet Archive version of William D Alexander s 1949 race film Souls of SinBlack women pioneers edit A website for Sisters in Cinema Documentary A History of African American Women Feature Film DirectorsColumbia University on Women Film Pioneer Project African American Women in the Silent Film Industry The Atlantic on When Hollywood s Power Players Were Women Greenlight Women on Celebrating Black Female Directors and Actresses over 40 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African American cinema amp oldid 1203288185, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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