Movie News: Will Smith first major film post-Oscars slap, Emancipation, earns praise at special screening UPDATE: Producer cacing

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Will Smith's first major film post-Oscars slap, Emancipation, earns praise at special screening

"This is a film about freedom. This is a film about resilience. This is a film about faith," said Smith.
By Lester Fabian BrathwaiteOctober 02, 2022 at 09:05 PM EDT




Ever since Will Smith won an Oscar — and slapped Chris Rock — his career has been in free-fall. Now the erstwhile Fresh Prince is out to prove there's still some sheen to his crown.
Apple screened the new film Emancipation from director Antoine Fuqua (Training Day) and starring Smith as Peter, an enslaved man who runs away from Louisiana in search of his family and ends up joining the Union Army.
The fate of the film, as well as a number of Smith's projects, was up in the air after the-slap-not-seen-but-talked-about-around-the-world. But Apple, which produced Emancipation, hosted a screening with the NAACP during the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's 51st Annual Legislative Conference before an audience of social impact leaders, signaling its intention to release the film soon. And with the Oscars just around the corner.

"This is a film about freedom. This is a film about resilience. This is a film about faith," Will Smith said of his first major film post-Oscars slap, 'Emancipation.'

| CREDIT: NEILSON BARNARD/GETTY
Following the screening, Smith, who has kept a rather low profile since the last Academy Awards, participated in a conversation with Fuqua, and Mary Elliott, curator of American Slavery at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, moderated by political and cultural commentator Angela Rye.

"Throughout my career, I've turned down many films that were set in slavery," Smith said at the screening. "I never wanted to show us like that. And then this picture came along. And this is not a film about slavery. This is a film about freedom. This is a film about resilience. This is a film about faith."

New York's Harper's Weekly, the most widely-read journal during the Civil War, published an infamous image of the real-life Peter, (or Gordon, or "Whipped Peter") with horrific scars on his back in 1863. The photo, which Smith referred to as "the first viral image," provided Northerners with visual evidence of the brutality of slavery and inspired free Blacks to join the Union Army.

"This is a film about the heart of a man — what could be called the first viral image," Smith said. "Cameras had just been created, and the image of 'Whipped Peter' went around the world. It was a rallying cry against slavery, and this was a story that exploded and blossomed in my heart that I wanted to be able to deliver to you in a way that only Antoine Fuqua could deliver."
The film, and Smith, were greeted with a warm reception, with NAACP President and CEO Derrick Johnson calling it "a story of adversity, of resilience, of love, and of triumph."

However, should Smith and Emancipation generate any Oscar buzz, Smith won't be able to attend the ceremony, or any ceremony, for another 10 years.
 
I know exactly which pic they're talking about when they said "Whipped Peter“, I remember I had a book of slave narratives with him on the cover when I was in the Army and when I got a white roommate he said he was scared to talk to me the first week he moved in because that was the first thing he saw when he walked in the room..lol
 
I just can't watch slave movies like Amistad, Twelve Years a Slave, Django and probably this one too even though Will says it's not a slave movie. I've tried but after viewing a few scenes the hatred I feel for white people and the shit they have done as depicted in these type films is just overwhelming to the point I mentally visualize shooting cacs and coons in the head. Not good for my psyche so now I don't watch them at all because I just can't separate the art from the history. :hmm:
 

DOWN
Will Smith, Emancipation
He’s banned from the ceremony for the next ten years, but will the owner of the most famous palm this side of Ruben Östlund be able to nab a nomination anyway? For a Best Actor vehicle, Emancipation is more of a physical feat than an emotive one and most impressive as a display of movie-star presence: Will Smith commands the screen for long stretches without the aid of dialogue. (Thanks to a leaden script, the parts when he does speak are among the film’s weakest.) If there’s a Best Actor race worth trying to sneak into, it’s this one, and Smith has been careful to cut a penitent figure on the campaign trail. Considering the history, though, Emancipation would probably have to be undeniable for Smith to have a shot. I’m skeptical.

DOWN
Antoine Fuqua, Emancipation
Apple’s late-breaking contender debuts this week, and surprise surprise, it turns out to be much more of a survival epic than the solemn period piece you might have expected from its promo campaign. Think of it as a less visceral version of The Revenant, though Antoine Fuqua is not the maestro Alejandro Iñárritu is — Fuqua’s direction alternating at times between pulpy and hokey. On paper, this slavery drama is squarely in the Academy’s wheelhouse — it even shares the oh-so-serious desaturated look of another competitor, Women Talking — but its Oscar fortunes will come down to how voters are feeling about Emancipation’s
 
I was sickened listening to him talking about his “collection“ and that photo of him showing off the photo was disgusting, I probably would have slapped it out of his hand if that cac was talking about this is the ORIGINAL PHOTO taken....smh

 
He messed up his apology

And it almost seems he did so intentionally

Why dies he INSIST on calling the man Peter when we ALL know that is NOT his name?

 
Hmmmm

So he is Haitian ?

 
Hmmmm

So he is Haitian ?

Make your point, playa. You side scrolling like a sum'bitch.:popcorn:
 
Hmmmm

So he is Haitian ?


That concept will enrage the ADOS.
 

Will Smith Says Ben Foster Lived in a Tent While Filming Emancipation
By Zoe Guy, a news writer who covers film, TV, music, and celebrities


The latest stop on Will Smith’s Emancipation press tour is a very familiar one: Red Table Talk. In a special edition moderated by his children, Trey, Jaden, and Willow, Will had a discussion about his upcoming movie that was low on The Slap discourse and heavy on Method acting. Faced with traumatizing and dehumanizing subject matter — including being called the N-word in scenes and an accident where the Oscar-winning actor was locked in neck chains for quite some time — Will said that he couldn’t help but go too far with the character. “You go into a state, and when you go that one click too far,” he explained, “Will Smith disappears, and then what happens is, psychologically, you go farther and farther into Peter, and you don’t realize that ‘you’ are slipping away. And then it’s over, and you go back, and you look for you, and you’re gone.”


Another actor went further than Will to get into his character’s mind. Ben Foster — who plays the film’s villain, a slave tracker and marksman — didn’t acknowledge Will at all during production and only greeted him once Emancipation wrapped. On the first day of filming, Will told a story about how he greeted the extras after losing an entire day to lightning and heat. “In my mind I was giving my best Will Smith, and Ben just walked past me and didn’t say nothing,” he said. “I thought, Oh, he must not have seen me. And then for six months he didn’t speak to me. He didn’t make eye contact with me. He didn’t say a word. He didn’t acknowledge me for six months. But what he did that first day, I was like, Yup, got it. We’re not playing. This is real. We’re not fooling around.”

Foster was so intense on set that he spent his days not in his trailer, but in his character’s tent, according to Will. “He had all his stuff in his character tent,” the actor said to his children on the talk show. The school of Method acting salutes you, Ben Foster. Even if the implications of Method acting for this kind of movie are a little …
 
Hmmmm

So he is Haitian ?

Just got done watching it. Yes he is, they spoke creole a bit in the movie. What a surprise! Seen that picture many times but never knew the story
 
Just got done watching it. Yes he is, they spoke creole a bit in the movie. What a surprise! Seen that picture many times but never knew the story

Yo.... the fact we STILL don't know our own history at every level is a tragedy

Especially as they CONTINUE to try to hide it and erase it.

I want someone to write a book and a documentary about how much Haiti effected the evolution of modern America.

From the revolution to New Orleans to Chicago and art and books and music and now this?

Even the book Frankenstein is based on Haiti.

They talking descendents of original slaves?

So what are Haitians in this country?
 
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