Anti-Birth of a Nation

Frida 2022-03-24 09:01:35

In the 1970s, a black man in the United States became the first local black police officer. He didn't want to be a display room in a file room, so he began to investigate the KKK, and finally, with the assistance of his colleagues, destroyed a bombing case conspired by the KKK.

The main line is based on a true case, but director Spike Lee's excellent film language makes this work an excellent black comedy mocking white racism. The five minutes at the beginning and the end are like a stroke of magic, allowing the film to enter the play from laughter and play in silence.

To understand this film, we must first understand the history of the KKK in the United States. This is a pure white organization. Some people praise it for defending the dignity of white people, and some people call it a racial persecutor. The Ku Klux Klan has had several ups and downs in American history, but it is no longer large in the United States.

There is an old movie called "The Birth of a Nation", which has a pivotal position in the history of movies. It is the first film of parallel montages that has survived to the present, but it has also been criticized for its whitewashing of the KKK.

"The Black Klanker" used an entire plot to mock "The Birth of a Nation". A group of white people gathered while watching this white supremacy movie and shouted white power, corresponding to a group of black people next door. The history of persecution shouts black power with strong irony.

View more about BlacKkKlansman reviews

Extended Reading

BlacKkKlansman quotes

  • David Duke: Ron Stallworth. are you a white, non- Jewish American citizen?

  • Ron Stallworth: You know, they say, two afros that touch together, it's good luck.

    Patrice Dumas: Who said that?

    Ron Stallworth: I read it somewhere.