Friday
Bazinga!
I went into this film not knowing what it was about. I chose it from my friend's collection simply becuase Gary Sinise, one of my favorite actors, was in it.
Word of advice...never go into a film without knowing what it's about. You never know what you might encounter. It was a very trying film, to say the least.
The gist of the film is this...a near retirement college professor is accused of racism for uttering, at the very least, a borderline racial epithet in class. he quits, and on that day his wife has an embolism and dies. The kicker is this...he's black. He's "passed" since he was in college, and not even his wife was aware of his heritage.
This not only brings up issues of the rampant, almost pathological move towards political correctness in today's universities, but also addresses the issue of a black person "passing" in society.
The very fact that African Americans feel the need to "pass" speaks volumes about how the black race is viewed, and treated in the US. If there wasn't an epidemic of prejudice, this practice of denying one's identity wouldn't even exist.
Word of advice...never go into a film without knowing what it's about. You never know what you might encounter. It was a very trying film, to say the least.
The gist of the film is this...a near retirement college professor is accused of racism for uttering, at the very least, a borderline racial epithet in class. he quits, and on that day his wife has an embolism and dies. The kicker is this...he's black. He's "passed" since he was in college, and not even his wife was aware of his heritage.
This not only brings up issues of the rampant, almost pathological move towards political correctness in today's universities, but also addresses the issue of a black person "passing" in society.
The very fact that African Americans feel the need to "pass" speaks volumes about how the black race is viewed, and treated in the US. If there wasn't an epidemic of prejudice, this practice of denying one's identity wouldn't even exist.