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What Spike Lee doesn’t want you to remember about ‘BlacKkKlansman’

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It’s hardly a shock to see Spike Lee sending a message with his movies. Few filmmakers weaponize their work quite like Lee, occasionally to glorious effect as with “Do the Right Thing.” Lee’s latest broadside doesn’t just miss the mark, however; it obscures a profound evolution in American society. 

“BlacKkKlansman” tells the true story of Ron Stallworth (John David Washington), the first black police officer in Colorado Springs, Colo., in the mid-1970s. Stallworth successfully infiltrated a local Ku Klux Klan chapter with an ingenious two-pronged approach: He convinced the chapter’s leader of his “racist” bona fides on the phone and used a white fellow officer (Adam Driver) to pose for face-to-face encounters.  

{mosads}The film, opening Aug. 10, earned early raves from its Cannes Film Festival screening.  

 

What left some liberal critics cheering didn’t happen until the film’s waning moments. “BlacKkKlansman” ends with footage from the 2017 Charlottesville, Va., protest surrounding the removal of a Gen. Robert E. Lee statue. 

Among those marching?

White supremacists, tiki torches in hand. Antifa protesters joined the fray. Later, a white supremacist drove into protesters, killing Heather Heyer, 32.

The incendiary footage in “BlacKkKlansman,” including selectively edited clips of President Trump addressing the tragedy, has nothing to do with the film; its inclusion is another matter. Clearly, Lee wanted to paint President Trump as a racist while showing how bigotry remains an intractible part of U.S. culture. Lee said as much during a Cannes Film Festival press conference

Reality tells a different story on two fronts. 

Racism is alive, well — and a fraction of what it was four decades ago. Racial progress is easy to spot all around us, like integrated communities and marriages; a 2017 report revealed the number of integrated marriages jumped from 3 percent in 1967 to 17 percent in 2015. 

People of color routinely hold some of the highest offices in the country. Popular culture is replete with faces of all creeds and colors.

Progress remains, of course. Here’s just one example: Hollywood hasn’t afforded minorities the same opportunities as white males in recent years, although the industry is aggressively addressing that disparity. And news accounts occasionally show stories where racism rears its nauseating head once more. Those headlines are received with near-universal disgust, as they should be.  

More telling? The very whiff of racism is enough to end careers. Just ask Michael Richards, the “Seinfeld” fixture whose star crashed to earth after he screamed the “n-word” at a black comedy-club heckler. Or PaulaDeen, the down-home chef whose TV gigs vanished after she confessed to using the same ugly word “a very long time ago.” 

ABC canceled the smash “Roseanne” reboot after a racist tweet from the show’s creator and star. Barr defended her message, saying she didn’t realize former Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett was black. It didn’t matter. A series that delivered massive ratings to the network vanished. 

More recently, Papa John’s founder John Schnatter resigned after word leaked that he had quoted someone else using the “n-word” during a meeting. He didn’t use the word himself directly. Nor did he give it any power or authority. That didn’t matter. 

Does that sound like something we’d see in a film set during the ‘70s? 

Making matters worse is how Lee twists the president’s comments following the Charlottesville tragedy. Some voters insist Trump is racist to the core, an argument for another time — let’s focus on Trump’s comments after Charlottesville. At the Cannes Film Festival, Lee excoriated the president with a profanity-laced rant.

Here’s what Trump said during the first press conference after the tragedy: “We condemn in the strongest possible terms this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence on many sides, on many sides. It’s been going on for a long time in our country … It has no place in America.”

Eyewitness accounts of the protest confirmed violence emanated from both sides of the clash

Trump continued: “Above all else, we must remember this truth, no matter our color, creed, religion or political party, we are all Americans first. We love our country. We love our God. We love our flag. We’re proud of our country. We’re proud of who we are.“ 

Trump’s follow-up presser got more specific, following bipartisan complaints that he hadn’t gone far enough initially. Neither those specific denunciations nor the aforementioned attacks on “hatred, bigotry and violence” made it into Lee’s movie. 

It’s certainly harder to explain away Trump’s “good people on both sides” comment. Some marchers may have been motivated by the removal of a statue, and all that portends, more than racial animus. They still should have fled upon seeing the White Nationalist spirit engulfing the protest, including reprehensible chants like, “Jews will not replace us.”

Movies like “Race,” “42” and now “BlacKkKlansman” do an incredible service to the nation; they remind us of racism’s ugly, all too real roots while imploring Americans to stamp out racism whenever it reappears, no matter the scale. They also show just how far we’ve evolved as a culture. Yet, Lee’s new film is wrong to suggest that progress isn’t a reality. 

Christian Toto is editor of the conservative entertainment site HollywoodInToto.com and host of the weekly Hollywood in Toto Podcast.

Tags BlacKkKlansman charlottesville rally Donald Trump Donald Trump Racism Spike Lee White House

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