
Few Hollywood films are as difficult to mount as the biopics of historical figures. From The Hurricane to Malcolm X, A Beautiful Mind to Munich, The Social Network to even the most recent Best Picture Oscar winner The King’s Speech, there is always criticism that the filmmakers have been either too tough or too soft on flawed protagonists. It also isn’t unusual for that criticism to begin in the early script stage, even though screenplays get rewritten and vetted so much that a first or second draft might not reflect what ultimately ends up in the finished film. A recent target was Clint Eastwood’s J. Edgar, whose script bizarrely was critiqued in The New York Times by a screenwriter who’d done a Hoover film years earlier and thus may have had a vested interest in seeing the new project not best his own. But what happens when the family and friends of a biopic subject get an early look at a script and don’t like what they’ve read? Should studios and/or distributors succumb to such pressure from insiders or ignore them? And what exactly in biopics constitutes fact vs fiction?
Martin Luther King Jr was killed 43 years ago today. Deadline revealed last Friday that Universal Pictures had dropped the Scott Rudin-produced and Paul Greengrass-directed MLK project Memphis. I’d heard that the decision came after the King estate and MLK confidante Andrew Young applied pressure. Young has confirmed to me (interview below) he did indeed contact Universal and objected to a Memphis script draft that, among other things, depicted marital infidelity in Dr. King’s final days. Young said he also refuted a depiction of himself securing a hotel room for a young woman who had accompanied King’s brother to Memphis.
I learned that Young was told by Universal that it would not move forward with Memphis in response to his claims of factual inaccuracies. A studio spokesperson continues to claim that Universal’s decision was based on scheduling, specifically uncertainty whether the movie could be ready for release in time for MLK’s birthday next February. The studio denied outside pressure played any role in deep-sixing the pic.
But this is not the first time Young has had reservations about the factual accuracy of a MLK biopic. He confirmed to me he also raised objections to purported facts in the script Selma, including mentions of infidelity as well. The on-again-off-again indie drama, developed by Precious helmer Lee Daniels with backing from The Weinstein Company, is about King’s march to the steps of the State Capital Building in Montgomery weeks after marchers demonstrating about voter rights were brutally beaten by law enforcement officoals on the Edmund Pettis Bridge. “They didn’t even identify the woman who started that march, Amelia Boynton, who was beaten on the bridge and left for dead on Bloody Sunday,” Young told me. “You want to talk about a role for Oprah, there it is. They said, ‘We have our script,’ and I said, ‘No, you don’t.’ They call it poetic license, but I told them it doesn’t make sense to take poetic license when the real story is more powerful.”
Despite Young’s objections, the filmmakers behind both Selma and Memphis still hope to get their MLK projects made. Rudin and Greengrass are now looking for a new home in hopes of keeping their film on track for its February release. I read a draft of their Memphis from late last year. In my opinion, the film isn’t a biopic as much as a depiction of Dr. King’s final days as he struggled to organize a protest march on behalf of striking black municipal sanitation workers. That is juxtaposed with an intense manhunt for King’s assassin James Earl Ray, involving some of the federal authorities who, at Hoover’s direction, had dogged King’s every step with wiretaps and whispering campaigns before the civil rights leader’s death. Greengrass’s script is powerful stuff, and by the end, honors King’s struggle and ultimate sacrifice. But infidelity — which comes up in any Internet search on Dr. King — is in the script.
Young is admittedly protective of the reputation of his close friend, and said he pines for someone to do for King what Richard Attenborough did for Gandhi. He tells me when he read the script for Memphis, “I thought it was fiction.” As for the depiction of infidelity, Young said: “There is testimony in congressional hearings that a lot of that information was manufactured by the FBI and wasn’t true. The FBI testified to that. I was saying simply, why make up a story when the true story is so great? My only concern here is honoring the message of Martin Luther King’s life, and how you can change the world without killing anybody. You’ve seen glimpses of that in the fall of the Berlin Wall, in Poland, South Africa, in a movement in Egypt that began with prayers, where even mercenaries and the most brutal soldiers have trouble shooting someone on their knees. These regimes crumbled before non-violent demonstrations, and that is a message the world needs.”
I suggested that when films canonize subjects, audiences can sense it, and that is why good biopics mix reverence with warts-and-all treatment. Young said: “It’s not wrong if the warts are there. But we had the most powerful and understanding wives in history, Coretta, my wife Jean, and Ralph Abernathy’s wife Juanita. These women were more dedicated and enthusiastic in pushing us into these struggles than anybody, and the inference Coretta might have been upset about Martin being gone so much or them having marital troubles, it’s just not true. Maybe I’m piqued because nobody read my book, and I tried to be honest, and I was there. We were struggling with history that we didn’t even understand, but somehow by the grace of God it came out right. We were trying to change the world, not by any means necessary, but by being dedicated to loving our enemies and praying for those who persecuted us. That’s hard to believe in this day and age. But I can remember when everybody had guns in the South, and after Martin’s house was bombed, they all came. He sent them home. Time after time, our nonviolent commitment was put the test, but that was one test we passed, even in extremely difficult circumstances.” Young said he offered input on Memphis, but hasn’t heard back. “I said I would pay my own way to LA to sit with the writers, tell what really went on, and give them names, but nobody took me up on it,” he said.
But that’s because the filmmakers of Memphis were still waiting on a Universal greenlight. Both Greengrass (on Bloody Sunday and United 93) and Rudin (The Social Network) are veterans of the vetting process. During Oscar season, much was made of the way that input from Facebook influenced some scenes in The Social Network, but Rudin and director David Fincher and screenwriter Aaron Sorkin stood their ground when Facebook asked for changes to scenes the filmmakers had corroborated independently. In the end, Mark Zuckerberg embraced it.
Hollywood has long tried to find a way to tackle King’s life for a feature film, but it was deemed too sprawling. There are now at least four different projects in the works. While HBO’s 7-hour miniseries adaptation of Taylor Branch’s book trilogy intends to cover King’s voluminous civil rights activist career from start to finish, it seems somehow appropriate that feature films like Memphis break off pieces of MLK’s journey, showing different sides of one complex legend.


Hey, but what about the Life of Pushkin, duh, winning!
This is a great piece. All points are given voice and a primary source is actually on the record. Dear industry press, the town is craving more of this ‘real’ reporting.
Agreed! Refreshing to see…
Bore you I will not, and I do have the facts. They are documented. When I was growing up on the Westside of Chicago, Illinois the late Dr. King rented and apartment on the Westside at 1550 South Hamlin. I know because I was there. I may have been somewhat young, but everyone in the neighborhood turned out to see, meet and greet Dr. King and his family.
The building is gone now but the memories remain.
I am aware that an AME Church on the Southside of Chicago tried to make the claim he lived there. But I have documented information to the contrary.
I hope they get it right because I remember the movie made about the “Red Ball Express” during WW II. They had an all white cast with one Black actor, and my father was angry because he drove for the “Red Ball Express” during the war.
Need I say more. Get it right Hollywood.
The movie “The Devil’s Brigade” is also factually inaccurate, and offensive to those vets of the First Special Service Force. They were not hell raising cons and troublemakers. Most movies don’t “get it right”. Deal and read a book, or become Harvey Weinstein and get the movies you want made.
the redball express was a supply convoy 75% of drivers were african american you have to rember hollywood didn’t have a lot of black actors in the 40s!
“showing different sides of a complex legend” is completely different from fictionalizing history. Memphis walks the line of flat out fictionalizing history.
Have you read the script? I have, and many books on the movement, there is nothing in the Greengrass script that “flat out fictionalizes” history. King’s infidelities are depicted as part of the story: he’s away from home fighting for the cause all the time, so he finds solace with a woman who is part of the movement and understands how heavy the burden is. If anything, the adultery story makes King seem more impressive because it dramatizes the effects of the struggle on the personal life of its leader… I think Universal made a very bad call here. They look craven and weak and disorganized as a studio.
If you’ve read books on the movement then perhaps you’ll consider reading Young’s book, because, I don’t know, he was there!
The tales of King tomcatting are FBI defamatory nonsense. The FBI had white bread agents trying to sow devision in all the civil rights organizations.
And after watching Green Zone I HIGHLY doubt Greengrass gives a damn about King’s life, or telling a dramatic story. he’s pure Hollywood prurient crap. Tell a tale with sex lies and audiotapes.
King deserves the best treatment (cinematically and sentiment-wise) Hollywood can muster. If they can’t –or won’t– do it then there shouldn’t be a film. Young is right. A bunch of people whose parents probably fought against King’s peaceful army now want to make a movie about him but could care less what actually happened. At what point do we call this immoral and wrong?
The FBI used his infidelity to discredit him, by sending tapes to Coretta Scott King. While disgusting and American, they simply drew attention to a secret, instead of fabricating one.
Funny how all these folks who claim King was tomcatting can NEVER produce any evidence. Where are these “tapes” we hear about?
After 40 years wouldn’t at least one of them have come to light by now?
There’s only one thing keeping your precious “tape” from coming to light: reality! You can’t expose what doesn’t exist. Get over it.
It is well documented in Georgia Davis’s book (and many others) that he cheated on his wife. Once you stop wasting your energy trying to create a saint you will understand history better.
King’s infidelities are not in question. Many of the fellow leaders in the Movement have admitted that they along with Martin often found women in different towns. Abernathy has written about this at length. It doesn’t make him a horrible person or ruin his legacy because it is already an accepted part of his legacy.
Here we go AGAIN! You “King was unfaithful” zealots are just like Joseph McCarthy with his “list of names.” It’s indictment through innuendo. You have no proof –never did!
All you keep saying is, it’s “well documented.” But you NEVER produce the documents, so apparently it ain’t that well documented, now is it?
You are simply a bigot who rears his empty head whenever he think he can attack a person of color or symbol thereof from behind the anonymity of your keyboard.
Produce your “documents” or STFU.
I won’t be holding my breath while I wait for that evidence. I’ve been waiting 30 years so far!
Actually, Ralph made vague references on only two pages of his lengthy book — added, incidentally, at the insistence of a publisher that told him it would flop otherwise. He was vilified by everyone who knew the real facts.
No, Young was not there when he died. He arrived later that night.
Abernathy and Reverend Kyles were the ONLY two that were present prior to the shooting, Kyles being the only one present on the balcony with King when he was shot.
Others were present in the parking lot below.
I would love to see this, “warts” and all. The portrayal of the infidelity is interesting. If it’s true, include it. But if it’s not, and his friend is correct in pointing out that the FBI planted the information (which IS conceivable given the time period – it’s possible that the FBI – a white male organization – could have planted such information about him, right?) then that would be sad. R.I.P. Dr. King.
The infidelity rumors have never been confirmed by involved people. It is possible for a man to be great without public secrets and hidden trysts.
And it is possible for a man to be great with public secrets and hidden trysts.
Look, whether it’s Dr King, or Michael Jackson or Tiger Woods, white people have an obsession with black people as it pertains to sex. They see a black man in a prominent spot they immediately go looking under his bedsheets.
He could be embezzling millions –they don’t care.
He could have killed peolple –so what.
Who was he sleeping with? That’s the burning question that whites want to know.
That kinky pathological addiction is what drives this nuttery. The fact that none of you conspiracy theorists can provide ANY evidence to support your addiction, yet you proclaim it gospel truth proves your true motives.
thats the burning question that whites want to know
thats sounds smart. great observation, and relayed brilliantly. you are someone smart and thoughtful.
Ralph Abernathy one of the leaders of the Movement and close friend of King wrote that: “Martin and I were away more often than we were at home; and while this was no excuse for extramarital relations, it was a reason. Some men are better able to bear such deprivations than others, though all of us in SCLC headquarters had our weak moments. We all understood and believed in the biblical prohibition against sex outside of marriage. It was just that he had a particularly difficult time with that temptation.”
I just wanted to point out, the quote that you just provided does not actually say MLK committed adultery. If the best evidence you have is a guy saying MLK was tempted…
possible…but not probable.
What an irony. Bio-pics need to have no ‘factual inaccuracies’, but Fox News can make up whatever it wants to present.
Can’t we go back to the old days when movies could be inaccurate but the news was factual.
It’s not journalism. Narrative filmmaking is inherently fictional. Unless you’re making a documentary, you should be free to make up whatever you want.
This has to be the best article I’ve read from this industry in a long time. I think it’s a terrible shame, an embarrassment, that they did not take this guy up on his offers. I mean, he’s still alive. Living history. That’s pathetic. And I’m glad deadline.com didn’t slam him or portray him as a fool. I think MLK is the top of all biopics in this country. The history is too recent to be diminished unfairly. It has to be treated right, it’s that important.
This is the kind of reporting/writing that puts deadline in a league of its own. Great job!
fantastic article
It’s funny how a pretentious industry like Hollywood where so-called “liberals” practice all sorts of discrimination in the workplace while engaging in every manner of deplorable behavior always have a desire to air the dirty laundry of historically beloved figures. It’s almost like a sick addiction to make themselves feel better by bringing everyone else down. Especially those they envy.
Whether King’s infidelities are accurate or not (possibility) it shouldn’t in any way become a deal breaker. There’s so much more to the man’s life and death than who he may or may not have slept with.
A far more interesting tale would target the powerful forces both left and right that tugged at the man throughout his life and ultimately brought about his death. The most amazing and unspoken element of his story to me is the level of betrayal he had to contend with from many in his social and political circle who proceeded onto high profile political careers, pockets weighed down with their proverbial 30 pieces of silver. It would take a real set of balls to make that film but that might be expecting too much from the “nip and tuck” crowd. Pun intended.
Who cares who he slept with? Shallow, morally bankrupt people who need consolation to deal with their own personal issues and deviancy. That’s who.
I agree — who cares who he slept with?
Sort of like Bill Clinton.
Or as far as entertainment is concerned, THE KENNEDYS miniseries… which is totally devoted to Kennedy’s extramarital dalliances. I mean, who cares who he slept with?
Right?
Wrong. Try again.
So, Kentucky State Senator Georgia Davis Powers’s autobiography (“I Shared The Dream: The Pride, Passion and Politics of the First Black Woman Senator From Kentucky”) which detailed her affair with Dr. King was “manufactured by the FBI?”
The fact that Young, a man I greatly, greatly admire, wants a “Gandhi”-like movie about King says a lot as that movie was certainly more worshipful hagiography that fact-based docudrama.
If Ralph Abernathy was still alive, I think he’d have something to say about Young deciding what can and cannot be put into a movie about King.
“Martin. It’s all right. Don’t worry. This is Ralph. This is Ralph.”
His eyes grew calm and he moved his lips. I was certain he understood and was trying to say something. Then, in the next instant, I saw the understanding drain from his eyes and leave them absolutely empty.
–Ralph Abernathy, AND THE WALLS CAME TUMBLING DOWN
If you want to share King’s journey, you have to tell Ralph Abernathy’s story. Greengrass and Universal should option Abernathy’s autobiography. It will shame and silence many of their critics.
You sound like these other goofs who ONLY seem interested in pushing for a movie that forwards the fiction that King was unfaithful to his wife.
You TeaBaggers really need to get a hobby.
There were only two other men with King the hour and a half before he died at the Loraine Motel.
Abernathy and Reverend “Billy” Kyles. Kyles was the ONLY person on the balcony with King when he was shot. Kyles’ point of view is important and seldom heard or investigated. His story was told in a Oscar Nominated short two years ago, “The Witness: From the Balcony of Room 306″.
Many “Civil Rights Leaders”, Young included (Jesse Jackson, etc.), have imbelished and lied about their relevance to King’s last hours and what was really going on.
More thorough fact checking would be nice, but that is never the basis for film making unfortunatley.
B/c the “gandhi” legacy is worth more, monetarily.
The FBI was behind his murder they hated him and they framed James Earl Ray he never fired that rifle but they pinned it on him same way Lee Harvey Oswald was framed in Dallas. King was shot by an Army or FBI sniper who was rushed away from the motel by the same FBI who then pretended to investigate the shooting. Ray was the convenient patsy and this is documented. They also bugged King’s many hotel rooms and the affairs he had with other women were real they happened in some cases they had microphones under the bed.
Andrew Young is just pathetically trying to whitewash history in the interest of hagiography. Ralph Abernathy (a far closer friend of MLK’s than Young) and pretty much every King biographer or historian (Garrow, Branch, etc.) have all confirmed King’s infidelity. According to firsthand testimony, it’s also documented by volumes of FBI recordings, transcripts, photos, and logs that remain under court-ordered seal for another 15 or 16 years. Branch, who reveres King, even relates the story of how King confessed to Coretta, as she was recovering from a hysterectomy, that he kept a coterie of mistresses, one of whom lived in L.A. and who he regarded as almost a second wife.
That MLK was a serial adulterer is a documented fact, disputed only by a handful of would-be mythologizers like Young. MLK was a great man, but he was just that: a man, and like any man, he had flaws – one of which was his penchant for infidelity. Any fact-based dramatization of his life has to include that thread to maintain credibility.
Exactly.
Brock: “Andrew Young is just pathetically trying to whitewash history in the interest of hagiography.”
I suggest you read this excellent article one more time. I notice Young never denied that King had an affair but he objected to having himself portrayed as some sort of middleman. Alas, this was the achilles heel of the script…Young found it and hit it hard.
“Any fact-based dramatization of his life has to include that thread to maintain credibility.”
Yeah, and every movie needs a romantic subplot to get the women interested.
Simply saying “this happened, therefore it has to be shown” is a very weak argument, especially when the thing you’re saying happened is generally only brought up by people looking to discredit King [which is not to say that's what you're doing, only that those are the people who push to have this be explored in a movie that isn't about King as a human being at all].
Where has this ‘the facts mam and nothing but the facts’ attitude come from. There are countless Bio movies that took artistic lience with the subject and their lives. The Elizabeth movies are a prime example, those movies were riddled with inaccuracies and flat out made up garbage but they still got made and were good movies. Now suddenly everyone can’t accept an interpretation of a person, it has to be all facts or nothing? Please first the Kennedys get torpedoed and now this. Let the film makers make the film, if people are that lazy to believe everything they see on movies than this society is warped.
if anyone is going to look at the last days of Dr King, shouldn’t it be the guy who made United 93 with the support and, ultimately, total gratitude of all of the families of the dead? the administration and the air traffic controllers and even some of the passengers were depicted in occasionally unflattering and flawed behaviour, but the story never wavered from complete integrity and humanity.
the same filmmaker depicted the events on Bloody Sunday – events which had such catastrophic consequences in Northern Ireland that it took 40 years and mountains of corpses to get over them – with such rigorous honesty that both soldiers AND the families of the innocent victims alike thanked him for it.
if you go back further to his British tv work he made a brilliant and much awarded film about the racist murder of a young black teenager using actors and ‘real’ people: policemen, social workers, judges etc, a biopic of the scandal surrounging one of Britain’s most popular sportsmen and various war pieces based on books. the man does real real well, to put it mildly. He’s the only person who SHOULD be telling an MLK story.
He’s already proved that he’s about getting the story, the context and the narrative right and if he takes the occasional liberty with documentary realism and conflates characters or events, I’d still always rather watch his brave, ballsy, well-researched and socially responsible stories than a hagiography or, worse, a toothless retelling of public domain stories like the anodyne ‘W’ or Ali.
the studio and the family ought to think again – there’s nobody out there that does real stories with less hollywood compromise and more authenticity than Greengrass. and no, I don’t have a dog in the race, I just love film and the best filmmakers – and he’s definitely up there with the best, if not better than that.
I am a Greengrass fan myself, but remember these are real people and you cant just sully Andrew Young’s name with made up stuff. The guy is 70+ years old and worked his entire life to build his reputation.
Is your argument that because previous works by Greengrass were loved by the subjects who found it accurate, that one of the main subjects of this one has no right to complain about inaccuracies? Not sure I understand your point.
You know the miracle I’d love to see? I’d love to see the producers of these King movies hire some of the many talented BLACK screenwriters out there to write about, what is indisputably, the greatest black American to ever live. Wouldn’t that be original? And before any one of you uber liberals respond by saying I’m race baiting, ask yourself would a black screenwriter EVER be considered or hired to write the biopic of Golda Meir, Winston Churchill or Ann Franks? God bless the good sense of Andrew Young to protest any bastardization of the King Legacy!
You know Lee Daniels is black right?
Yes, I’m aware Lee Daniels is black. Which makes it all the more appalling that a black screenwriter isn’t writing his project about MLK. The other producers, except for Oprah (shame on her too!) are white.
yeah except for the black people everyone else is non-black
huh, racist Hollywood
Your post echoes very similar sentiments expressed in a previous Deadline piece about the MLK film, including your mention of biopics of Golda Meir and Winston Churchill. While a black man could never play Meier or Churchill, I see no reason why one could not write the best damn script about them ever. I read the script, not ask about the author’s ethnicity, I can assure you. You also confuse Anne Frank with a kind of sausage. It’s very easily done and only underscores your point about how skin color is obviously so essential to good writing.
Wait… So Anne Franks Aren’t a type of sausage?
I agree that a good black screenwriter could do a great job with a biopic on Winston Churchill
(duh, that was the point!).
But would he/she ever get the CHANCE to write it or even be considered for it is the question? If you think so, please name me a movie about a great white person, dead or alive, that was written by a black screenwriter? On the other hand, I can name you tons of movies (enough to fill a vault) written about black people or the black experience written by white screenwriters.
The ugly truth is black writers get to write black films while white writers get to write ALL films. Don’t believe me? Do the exercise I mentioned above and get back to me.
And as far as Anne Frank goes… I mistakenly added an “s” so ha ha to your smart comment about sausages. That was funny, sort of. Hopefully you won’t let that underscore the point I was making, or worse, hopefully it won’t keep your head in the sand about the dearth of diversity or equality when it comes to getting screenwriting assignments.
Carloyn, I can assure you, I and the people I work with and for don’t given a hoot about the writer’s skin color! Now I know you think we should, that we should be deliberately looking for black writers, but we aren’t. We are looking for good writers. Period. I have never, ever, rejected a writer for their skin color. To the best of my knowledge, my colleagues have never done so either. Writers get rejected for being complete crap, insane, lazy, sloppy, impossible, unreliable, unable to shower regularly and any other equally valid reason, but we have never ever used skin color as a factor! I read so many scripts and sometimes the writer’s ethnicity is clear (Kim Dong-Suk, Klaus Von Krauttenschnitzel – no cigars on offer here) but often it isn’t.
Black writers on black films? Tyler Perry, perhaps? Could a white author come up with that stuff? Would one even want to? But I bet if they did, he or she would be accused of perpetuating the worse kind of black stereotypes.
I have experienced people who say “White story, white writer, black story, black writer.” I prefer right story, right writer. If the film is a drama about street kids in the projects then, yes, theoretically, someone from that background could turn in the better work, but not necessarily. I’m open. I read the script and that has to work for me and my clients first.
I have also had, recently, a black, female, writer-director accuse me of rejecting her for being a) black and b) female! No, it was because her script was dire and her directing experience, a film-school short, showed no discernible talent. Should I have committed money to her purely because she is black and female?
In the UK, for example, a script about Churchill by a black writer might even be given more weight, provided it brought something new or excellent to the table. But the first thing that would happen is that the script would be read, author’s color unseen.
For casting, where a role is gender/race neutral, then diversity and equality by all means, but not when it means tokenism or political correctness gone mad. The UK producer Brian True-May (of the excellent Midsomer Murders series) is stepping down at the end of the season just for this very reason.
One of my favorite films is The Tuskegee Airmen (1995). I can’t say 100% for sure the writers are black but I would be prepared to bet on it. But when I first saw that film I was struck by the sheer quality of the writing, as well as the other core factors. But at no stage did or does their skin color play a role for me. Could white writers have done a better job? A worse one? How can anyone answer that? The film that got made is the film that exists.
It sounds like you are a writer yourself, not getting the assignments and respect you feel you should and you believe it is color-based. Maybe you are the victim of genuine racism or, alternatively, your writing is not up snuff. Writers of all colors get turned down all the time as well. So go choose your great white man or woman of history, but just make sure you turn in the best damn script ever!
Ripsnorter — Thank you for the thoughtful response. I really appreciate the time, energy and sensitivity you put into it. Now let me address a few things.
1) I’ve had successful writing career in this business for almost 20 years now, so this isn’t about me wanting an assignment. I am secure financially and am hoping to retire soon thanks to this business. But what frustrates me is I am ONE of very few writers of color that has been able to do that. Meanwhile, I’ve seen hordes and hordes of mediocre, at best, white writers get opportunity after opportunity, and a chance to grow and get better and enjoy staying power in this business. Unlike many black writers who are usually only hired to write black movies, at best.
2) Tyler Perry is an anomaly. And please don’t say his name in the same sentence with the word “writer”. It pisses most talented, hard working black writers off.
3) The whole “we are looking for good writers” is crap and frankly, a given. Just in case you don’t know this, there are some horrible white writers out there and some horrible black writers out there. As well, there are some terrific white writers out there, and some terrific black writers out there. But the question is, who gets the work? Who makes it into that room with that executive who can give you the assignment? Studios are always calling agents requesting “a good female writer”, so why can’t they do the same when it comes to “a good black writer? Whether it’s acted on subconsciously or consciously, there is blatant racism in this business. Don’t believe me, see #4.
4) Geoffrey Fletcher was the first African-American to win an Oscar ever. He won for Social Network…oops I mean The Hurt Locker…oops I mean PRECIOUS, a story about a big, fat poor black girl, last year. In the 83 YEARS the Oscars has been in existence there have been FIVE black nominees and ONE winner. That was FIVE and ONE. Now tell me, SIX black writers nominated in 83 years, would that be equality to you? Or, is that simply because black writers just aren’t “good” enough? Please help me with this. Enlighten me. I beg of you (seriously).
Tuskegee Airman was a great movie — agreed. But it wasn’t in theatres, it was made for television in 1995 and you are correct, it was written by a wonderful black writer, Paris Qualles. I’m not arguing for bits of the pie. I’m arguing for a fair share of the pie. And in my mind, ONE or if we’re lucky TWO, is not fair to me. I hope it isn’t to you.
Yes, they would be considered. By myself and many of my peers.
But, apparently, not by you.
Fantastic and thought provoking article that I have read and re-read. Kudos to deadline!
A man is not determined by who he beds down with, but by his deeds and achievements. King was a great man, the fact (and it is fact) that he had a slew of women was part of his human side. In a story, you need to show the human side of a man. Though he is great in his actions, he also is just a man. He has his flaws, his indiscretions. I understand that. We all do. Let it not taint the fact that King changed this nation, like Lincoln and Washington. We all want him to be perfect, but that’s not what he was nor was anyone. He was an extraordinary human being, but he was human. That makes the story much more compelling, much more accessible. Some would want King to be a god. That would be a great disservice to his legacy. He was just a man, who rose up to do great things. It is that inspiration that should be portrayed in his biopic.
I’m almost of a mind that historical biopics should be left to PBS. I
Really interesting piece. Of course Young himself has an agenda, and a book, so has a desire to have a certain version of MLK’s story portrayed.
The thing about bio-pics is that they’re not documentaries. They can only ever represent the essence of the subject of the story, and the key events in that part of their lives that is the subject of the film. We don’t know the exact words they used, what they were thinking, only those standing next to them did, and by now their memories may have faltered.
So long as the key truths are represented – which can be easily corroborated, then surely that is ok?
Indeed in our own, King’s Speech, Helena Bonham Carter’s excellent portrayal of the Queen Mum, god bless her, was entertaining, but likely far from the more demure, restrained and self-contained manner of the middle classes of the time. But it worked well in supporting the overall story, the essence of which was Lionel Logue helping the King get over his stammer. That part was true, that was the story.
However, film makers do have a responsibility in getting the important facts right as for the audience, the film becomes the truth. I didn’t know the King had a stammer, I do now, and I believe everything that happened in the film. Why would I not?
A more interesting film of the MLK story might be the FBI’s campaign of dirty tricks to discredit King and their failure to catch-up with the fervour of his supporters. But maybe no American studio is brave enough to tell that one!!
“I believe everything that happened in the film. Why would I not?”
Because you’re an intelligent individual who understands that all narrative filmmaking is inherently fictional (i.e. people pretending to be other people) and that even most well researched stories can only represent a close approximation at best? Just throwing it out there.
Karen, you’re a racist, sexist waste of space. It amazes me you have the temerity to actually say things like that out loud. You ought to be ashamed of yourself.
Andrew Young is correct — the message of non-violent resistance IS what the world needs. That, however, doesn’t give him, or anyone, the right to whitewash the truth about an individual’s bad behaviors.
I’m sorry but after I reading the article I still don’t understand exactly who Andrew Young is or exactly what role he is playing in this process. He’s an official spokesman for the estate? He will organize a boycott of a film he doesn’t approve of? Someone has ceded him the power to greenlight and/or veto any public depictions of MLK?
I’m sorry, but it’s crap. He admits he’s “protective” of King’s legacy and wants a hagiographic movie along the lines of “Gandhi” to ensure MLK’s canonization. Well, there is no better way to ensure making a crap movie than go in with that kind of agenda.
It’s ironic this “discussion” is happening in the wake of “The Social Network;” hmmm, wonder how that movie would have turned out if Sorkin and Fincher and Pascal were kowtowing to the whims of one of Mark Zuckerburg’s “confidants” who wanted to “protect” his reputation. I doubt it would have done 100M and I’m sure no one involved would have gotten anywhere near the stage of the Kodak Theater.
MLK was a public figure — one of THE most public figures. His family doesn’t “own” his story and filmmakers don’t need their “permission” to tell a part of his life story that is thoroughly and well-documented in the public freaking domain. This was a very dispiriting article.
You and others on here need to stop comparing the legacy of Facebook with the legacy of MLK. One is a hot trend, the other helped reverse CENTURIES, millenia of human abuse and human despair by turning the other cheek. MLK is NOT Mark Zuckerberg. He and others reversed 4000 years of conventional wisdom which said a person’s race told you everything you needed to know about them. The idea that he and the founder of a website that allows you to contact your high school girlfriend are comparable says EVERYTHING about how material and celebrity-obsessed our culture has become.
Oh, and Young is a lot more than a representative of the King family. It takes you no time to do a two second web search to correct your ignorance before posting such a long, uninformed comment.
Andrew Young was MLK’s close friend.
“His family doesn’t “own” his story and filmmakers don’t need their “permission” to tell a part of his life story that is thoroughly and well-documented in the public freaking domain.”
Yeah they kind of do, considering how they’re in charge of his estate and legacy.
No, they actually kind of don’t. If you want to put an image of MLK on a T-shirt and sell it, yes, you need the permission of the estate. If you to take samples of recordings of his voice and put it in a Coke commercial, you need their permission.
If you want to make a movie based on the events surrounding his assassination based on public and sourced information, then no, YOU DO NOT NEED THEIR PERMISSION. Do you think George W. Bush gave Oliver Stone permission to make “W?”
US law provides very generous latitude to artists and storytellers dealing with public figures. You should familiarize yourself with the law and the facts before you go around declaring what is what.
“His family doesn’t “own” his story and filmmakers don’t need their “permission” to tell a part of his life story that is thoroughly and well-documented in the public freaking domain.”
You’re saying you have documents proving that Young set up a liason for King in the days before he died? Documents proving that the scripts accusations about King’s wife are more accurate than Young’s?
The fact that you also don’t even know who Young is suggests you didn’t even bother to read the article before responding.
One of the flaws of this article was that it did not properly situate Young and his relationship with the King estate and his role in this (or any other MLK) movie. Fleming simply calls Young a “confidant” and then spends most of the article paraphrasing what he said over the phone.
Interesting that Hollywood had no problem with the bio-pic “W” when it was lambasting a republican with whom they disagreed.
If you mean “pretty much ignored” by “no problem,” I agree.
Go back to Drudge. Plenty in Hollywood bellyached about the W biopic, but they couldn’t disagree with the facts.
George Bush was a moron and an idiot who had NO BUSINESS becoming anything like he did, EVER. MLK was a man who tried to do better by the world and paid for it with his life (too bad that Dubya couldn’t also ‘pay’ for what he’s done to the world!) Dubya got a humane treatment by Oliver Stone in that movie; MLK NEEDS to have one as well. If that means not dwelling on his sexcapades, then so be it, and too bad for those who want to see that. We need to see King as King The Hero, not King The Hero with flaws, because we all are hurting badly.
But “W.” was a surprisingly good movie that wasn’t mean-spirited at all.
Fantastic article, Mike.