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	<title>NYPress.com - New York&#039;s essential guide to culture, arts, politics, news and more &#187; Quentin Tarantino</title>
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		<title>Still Not a Brother: Armond White on &#8216;Django Unchained&#8217;</title>
		<link>http://nypress.com/still-not-a-brother-armond-white-on-django-unchained/</link>
		<comments>http://nypress.com/still-not-a-brother-armond-white-on-django-unchained/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 07 Jan 2013 17:28:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Armond White</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Armond White]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[City Arts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Django Unchained]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[movie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Quentin Tarantino]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Samual L Jackson]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[How SamJack stole Tarantino’s epithet orgy &#8216;Django Unchained&#8217; Uncle Tom, the black overseer created by Harriet Beecher Stowe and despised ever after, reappears to spy on and punish other slaves in Django Unchained. It is the role Samuel L. Jackson was born to play. Here named Stephen, Jackson’s Uncle Tom-style shuck-and-jive is prototypical–even atavistic–climaxing the profane, ]]></description>
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<p><em>How SamJack stole Tarantino’s epithet orgy &#8216;Django Unchained&#8217;</em></p>
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<p>Uncle Tom, the black overseer created by Harriet Beecher Stowe and despised ever after, reappears to spy on and punish other slaves in <em>Django Unchained</em>. It is the role Samuel L. Jackson was born to play. Here named Stephen, Jackson’s Uncle Tom-style shuck-and-jive is prototypical–even atavistic–climaxing the profane, deceitful racial self-hatred that he has accustomed us to in his detestable roles for <em>Django Unchained</em> director Quentin Tarantino, although not those alone.</p>
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<p><a href="http://nypress.com/?attachment_id=9070" rel="attachment wp-att-9070"><img class="alignnone" src="http://cityarts.info/wp-content/uploads/django-jackson.jpg" alt="django-jackson" width="510" height="317" /></a></p>
<p>In <em>Django Unchained, </em>Jackson is to Tarantino what Stepin Fetchit was to John Ford–the actor who personifies his director’s sense of the Other. This is not an alter-ego thing; it transfers detachment into “sympathy.” Roles like Jules in<em> Pulp Fiction</em>, Ordell in <em>Jackie Brown</em> and now Stephen the ultimate Uncle Tom display Jackson’s patented shamelessness–his Nigger Jim flair. Jackson reverses the anger that 70s black militants felt toward the Uncle Tom figure into an actorly endorsement. He embodies the dangerous Negro stereotypes harbored by Tarantino and every Huck Finn wannabe.</p>
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<p>That, essentially, is the transgression on view in <em>Django Unchained</em>. This pseudo (not neo-) Blaxploitation film about a freed slave (Jamie Foxx) who goes on a killing spree with a psychopathic bounty hunter (Christoph Waltz) two years before the Civil War (rendering that conflict unnecessary) offers a pointless jamboree of disparate sentimental, anachronistic and absurd elements; it seems aimless until Jackson’s Uncle Tom eventually shows up and galvanizes all Q.T.‘s hostile silliness.</p>
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<p>Not to rank Tarantino with Ford or Mark Twain but his diabolical Uncle Tom descends from their precursors, specifically to the way Twain refashioned American social codes into a narrative that to this day gratifies some people’s entrenched racial prejudices. That’s why <em>Huckleberry Finn</em> is canonized while Twain’s <em>Puddinhead Wilson</em> is not. It’s also why SamJack is the true star of <em>Django Unchained</em> and Jamie Foxx, with his pandering, deliberately modern swagger, is not.</p>
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<p>There’s no mistaking the division of labor or social/racial hierarchies preserved in Jackson-Tarantino’s spectacle: Tarantino uses a gray-haired, wily Jackson with a deceptive limp and mean scowl to fulfill his white hipster’s fanciful reinterpretation of social history. Through Jackson, QT gets to remake the cultural world he didn’t grow up in (complete with incongruous pop songs) and enjoy how its dangers and excesses effect a subordinate. Brazenly inauthentic,<em> Django Unchained</em> is unmistakably QT’s vision–trivializing slavery’s true deep treachery–and it’s an impersonal, privileged vision.</p>
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<p>Tarantino, who commands more leverage than any Hollywood director besides Spielberg, is beyond needing to look cool about his race obsession. He’s got Jackson to satisfy his need for pity. [More on this in my forthcoming book<em> Say What?]</em> Pity, according to the hipster definition laid out by Norman Mailer’s classic 1958 essay “The White Negro” (a confession that has entered the subconscious of every Wigger) is the flip side of envy and such pseudo-rebellious class envy borders that thin line next to contempt.</p>
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<p>Unlike Ford’s passive naif Stepin Fetchit, Jackson’s Uncle Tom is aggressive, an evil ol’ Brer Rabbit (even nastier than Ordell) who demonstrates how untrustworthy a black man can be. He incites his psychotic Massa (Leonardo DiCaprio) and cock-blocks the simpering romance between the titular stud and his wench (Kerry Washington). This despicable, scowling, sniveling, cursing and cinematically lynched figure reveals what SamJack really means to us: His self-hatred is hilariously grotesque. He’s malicious, not virtuous as Civil Rights Era Ford would idealize Woody Strode in <em>Sergeant Rutledge </em>and<em> The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance</em>. The narrative force exerted by Jackson’s character (and the actor’s lip-smacking glee at exceeding his previous wicked benchmarks) exposes Tarantino’s basic misunderstanding of Blaxploitation. He’s still not a brother.</p>
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<p>QT’s misguided delight matches that of black co-producer Reginald Hudlin, a Blaxploitation fan whose name is used to buffer expected complaints about racism. While Django<em> Unchained</em> satisfies the boyish black teen thrill that Hudlin has not outgrown, it primarily proclaims a white hipster’s voyeuristic pleasure in black vengeance–a form of Liberal porn, aberrant hip-hop.</p>
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<p>How did Hudlin let <em>Django Unchained</em> erase the politically-charged motivation behind most 70s Blaxploitation films? (Anyone who really knows the Blaxploitation era can only scoff at this movie’s white supremacy.) Insensitivity is evident in the sound and inexcusable repetitions of “nigger” by white characters. QT’s epithet orgy recalls the O.J. Simpson verdict quip “If the word ‘nigger’ could light up the sky, Los Angeles wouldn’t need streetlights.” <em>Django Unchained’s</em> First Amendment mockery suggests it’s lights-out in Obama’s America.</p>
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<p>This is not so simple as calling Tarantino, DiCaprio, Waltz, Washington, Hudlin or anyone else racists. (Besides, if QT could reap Oscar nominations for disgracing the Jewish Holocaust in<em> Inglourious Basterds</em>, our culture will surely let him can get away with anything.) These filmmakers simply don’t deliver whatever it is that can justify the word’s utterance as historical accuracy or emotional righteousness. It’s just fodder for Tarantino who single-handedly devised this mash-up of Blaxploitation and Italian Spaghetti westerns out of juvenile amusement–not Harriet Beecher Stowe’s abolitionist principles nor Blaxploitation’s get-whitey ingenuity. <em>Django Unchained’s</em> two antithetical genres only belong together in a reprobated mind.</p>
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<div><strong>Follow Armond White on Twitter at <a href="https://twitter.com/3xchair" target="_blank">3xchair</a></strong></div>
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		<title>Inglorious Basterds</title>
		<link>http://nypress.com/inglorious-basterds/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 19 Aug 2009 14:37:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Film]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Inglourious Basterds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Quentin Tarantino]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[“Back to barbarism” is the theme of Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds. Its misspelled title and cheesy homage to a 1970s grindhouse flick (by Enzo Castellari) all mock the notion of sophistication. Yet, it is truly unsophisticated. A barbaric jamboree, it uses the Jewish Holocaust as a pretext for gore, sadism and fanboy lore. This hipster ]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“Back to barbarism” is the theme of Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basterds. Its misspelled title and cheesy homage to a 1970s grindhouse flick (by Enzo Castellari) all mock the notion of sophistication. Yet, it is truly unsophisticated. A barbaric jamboree, it uses the Jewish Holocaust as a pretext for gore, sadism and fanboy lore. This hipster version of what the Village Voice once called “a feel-good Holocaust movie” (deriding Schindler’s List) intends audiences to get off on killing, mayhem and hatred. <span id="more-2999"></span></p>
<div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 410px"><img class=" " style="border: 1px solid black; margin: 6px;" src="http://i512.photobucket.com/albums/t323/ourtownnews/inglorious.jpg" alt="Eli Roth and Brad Pitt hate Nazis, too." width="400" height="267" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Eli Roth and Brad Pitt hate Nazis, too.</p></div>
<p>QT deliberately ignores Spielberg and Tony Kushner’s precedent-setting moral examination of Jewish (thus, global) conscience in Munich to capitalize on Jewish revenge. Genocide becomes a justification for QT’s usual comic brutality.</p>
<p>Holocaust deniers should love that Inglourious Basterds purports killing Adolf Hitler because its unreal fantasy not only flouts history but it vitiates the last half-century of post-Holocaust moral contemplation and historical reckoning. Hannah Arendt, Primo Levi and Elie Wiesel’s life’s work is not hip. Hip is watching a Jewish-American (played by Eli Roth) take a baseball bat to a Nazi’s head. “It’s the closest we get to going to the movies,” Brad Pitt approves in a lead role that amounts to a cameo.</p>
<p>Even Alain Resnais’ classic, unnerving concentration camp documentary Night and Fog pales next to the vibrant imaginings of this five-chapter instant-cult film—which offensively begins “Once Upon a Time…in Nazi Occupied France.” QT’s usual, facile time-shifts bring together Nazi officer Landa (Christoph Waltz); Jewish girl Shoshanna (Mélanie Laurent), who outruns his threats into her adulthood, and a gang of rogue GI’s (including Pitt and Roth) who hunt and scalp Nazis. It climaxes with a flaming showdown that turns a 1940s Parisian movie theater into an inferno.</p>
<p>Only the most gullible film geek will think QT is confirming cinema’s righteous social influence. The film is loaded with insincere postmodern mannerisms—heart-pounding music, an interjected clip from Hitchcock’s Sabotage, bizarrely “colorful” figures—that diminish WWII into various displays of eccentric egotism. QT references the obscure Aldo Ray, Yvette Mimieux, Bernhard Wicki and Emil Jannings. But has he ever appreciated Why We Fight, Let There Be Light, Stage Door Canteen—masterful films that treated WWII as a genuine, complex battle for mankind’s soul survival? There are no characters in Inglourious Basterds, just comic types—Nazi, Jew, WASP, all psychopaths—whose vicious games contribute to that simplistic Hollywood Manicheanism Pauline Kael long-ago ridiculed among film culture’s “Nazi junkies.”</p>
<p>When Landa compares Jews to rats, saying, “You don’t know why; you just don’t like them,” his cardboard villainy disregards the politics of ethnicity and social power—details QT always exploits, yet always glosses. Instead, his insipid fascination with pop culture as an incendiary medium feeds into the masochistic enjoyment of cruelty. QT’s shock tactics—from the use of David Bowie’s 1982 “Cat People” for a theme song to Pitt carving swastiskas into flesh—inhibit catharsis. It’s less meaningful than Indy Jones’ succinct “Nazis! I hate those guys.” Unlike Spielberg, QT takes the complexity out of war, racism, history and heroism. His love of movie trash doesn’t reveal deeper truth; it trivializes.</p>
<p>Look at how QT establishes scenes of personal conflict (in a farmhouse, a bar, a theater lobby) with long, talkative wind-ups. For a knowledgeable film-buff, he concentrates excessively on the overrated pleasures of time-wasting dialogue. (Could he ever accomplish an 80-minute thriller?) The slow-drag Inglourious Basterds finally contrasts Shoshanna’s nitrate specter with Col. Landa’s unmotivated yearning for Nantucket. At its best, it’s merely smart-ass.</p>
<p>Check the scene where Landa confronts Shoshanna years after he’s killed her family. Her loud, personal tension recalls Michael Corleone’s pivotal moment in The Godfather, but she’s not defined beyond her anguish. Her deliberately provocative union with Marcel (Jacky Ido), a Negro ex machina who helps Shoshanna carry out her plan to annihilate all of the Third Reich, is also undefined.</p>
<p>Marcel, who narrates the penultimate chapters, superfluously links this movie to QT’s beloved Blaxploitation genre—and to Spike Lee’s ludicrous WWII film, Miracle at St. Anna, where Nazis were also depicted as red-costumed cartoons. When history is minimized this way, movies are no longer a vanquishing truth, but garbage.</p>
<p>QT manipulates WWII horror into hip pornography—Jewish revenge looks just like the sadism in Eli Roth’s Hostel movie. Our political and moral responses are discombobulated.</p>
<p>&#8211;<br />
<em><strong>Inglourious Basterds </strong></em><br />
Directed by Quentin Tarantino<br />
Runtime: 153 min.</p>
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