Friday, March 22, 2024
Origin
Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor plays Isabel Wilkerson, an American Pulitzer Prize winning journalist who wrote, "The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration" and it won the National Book Critics Circle Award. Our true story begins with Wilkerson being asked to write a piece about 17-year-old Trayvon Martin who was shot and killed by 28-year-old George Zimmerman. Trayvon was just walking home. Soon after, Wilkerson has some personal losses in her life and she kind of has an epiphany: racism in America, it's not really what we think, it's the caste system. If you don't know what that is, well it's the Indian hierarchy of class. She makes a case that both American Slavery and WWII's Jewish holocaust were largely created by dominating class structures - Caste. Whether you fully buy into Wilkerson's theory or not, it doesn't change the fact this film is full of powerful emotional moments and stories. There is one about a little league team going swimming at a public pool where their only black player wasn't allowed to use the white-only pool - it choked me up. Both cruel and heart-wrenching stuff. The movie overall is an indictment of humanity and the unimaginable cruelty it's inflicted on those not born of good fortune and wealth. It's also a movie about personal loss and carrying on in the face of tragedy. Catch this on in theatres, on streaming, or grab a copy from your local video store. In Ottawa that would be Movies 'N' Stuff.
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