Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Movie: "True Grit"

Saw the remake of the classic John Wayne movie today. I was somewhat hesitant to see it becaue it's directed by the Coen Brothers, who tend to make odd, off-center movies (some are good, some not so good). I was afraid this would follow that pattern, but it doesn't. It's far and away their most straight-forward movie I've seen from them (their movies include Fargo, No Country for Old Men, Big Lebowski, Barton Fink, and others).

My memory of the John Wayne original is somewhat fuzzy, but this seems to be a faithful remake. I think the focus may be more on Mattie Ross, as she seems to have more scenes, especially at the beginning. But the actress playing the part is wonderful, echoing the toughness of the Kim Darby role years ago. Although sometimes her dialogue in this version seems a little too poetic at times. But overall, it's a great performance and likely to secure a supporting actress nomination.

Jeff Bridges as Rooster Cogburn doesn't make you forget John Wayne, but neither does he make you long for him either. He does just fine, neither adding or taking away anything John Wayne did. Matt Damon is much better in the role played by Glen Campbell, who was a terrible actor; definitely an improvement there.

As I said, I don't completely remember everything about the original, but certain scenes seemed to play out exactly as they did before (for example, the final 1 against 4 battle on horseback). The movie is rated PG-13, but foul language is minimal and although a couple bursts of violence, nothing too gory. Definitely worth seeing.

Thursday, December 02, 2010

Rosa Parks

December 1 was the 55th anniversary of when Rosa Parks refused to move to the back of the bus. Recently, IU South Bend hosted a speaker, Nikki Giovanni, who wrote a children's book about Rosa Parks and shared many insights into Parks that I hadn't heard before, or explained in detail (Giovanni knew her personally).
  • Contrary to the myth, Rosa Parks did not refuse to move because she was tired from working all day, she moved because she was "tired of giving in." She was already very much an activist within the NAACP so she was very much aware of the repercussions of her actions.

  • She sat in the blacks only section. But when the white section was full, the bus driver ordered her to give up her seat (in essence, expanding the whites only section). The bus driver was the same one who, 12 years earlier, sped off and left her in the rain when she initially refused to enter through the back of the bus.

  • Parks wasn't the first to refuse to move. Nine months earlier, a 15-year old girl refused to move and was arrested. So why didn't this spark a boycott? Well, the treatment of blacks on the city buses had been an issue for a while. But if a case was to be made, they needed a claimant above reproach. This girl, shortly after her arrest, had a child by an older, married man. The NAACP figured she'd be vilified in the press and so they didn't pursue a case (and charges against her were later dropped). Parks fit the bill as above reproach, similar to how Jackie Robinson was selected to break the color barrier in baseball.

But the most fascinating anecdote Giovanni shared was one that I had never heard before. Rosa Parks was not the only one asked to move. There were a couple other black men that were asked to move, and they did. They were never heard from again and Giovanni speculated that they were likely ashamed of their actions and would probably be seen as cowards for abandoning this woman.

But Giovanni said these men absolutely did the right thing and wish they could have been commended for doing so. In those days, for a black male to put up such resistance would have had dire consequences. Their refusal to move likely could have resulted in violence and certainly a much different outcome. The bus boycotts may never have happened.

So when these men sitting next to Rosa Parks moved, this allowed her to sit there all alone, determined to hold her ground . . . and the rest is history.