One of the most memorable things about last year’s
blockbuster film “Get Out” was the sunken place; that is, the image that
described how racist interactions can bury a person’s self worth. In “Sorry To
Bother You,” a new film by Boots Riley, that image is taken one step farther,
as the route to the sunken place is mapped in real time, in a scene that acts
like one of those literal-lyric videos.
It happens when the film’s protagonist, Cassius Green
(played by Lakeith Stanfield) is attending a party held by Steven Lyft, the
evil CEO of a company that supplies slave labor, and Lyft asks him to rap.
Cassius demurs. “I can’t rap,” he says, “but I’m pretty good
at listening to it.” Unfortunately, egged on by Lyft, the other party-goers
insist, chanting ‘Rap! Rap! Rap!’ until Cassius is forced to try. At first, he
fails miserably, but eventually he just starts chanting the phrase “N — N — N —
shit!” over a beat, while Lyftand his crew chime in, cheerily shrieking
“N—-shit!” along with him.
And in the balcony of the Castro Theater, where I was
attending a screening of the film at the San Francisco Film Festival, I
thought: “Damn!” Because that scene perfectly captured what I’ve always
secretly thought was so many white people’s appreciation of rap: i.e. that they
think it gives them permission to give in to their stupid Ids and merrily chant
“N —- shit!” over a beat.
The scene is emblematic of the half-funny/half-horrified tone
of “Sorry To Bother You,” as it excoriates many of the immoral, unethical, and
just plain mean aspects of modern living that are currently plaguing our planet.
Another good example is how, throughout the film, there is a reality game show
in the background called “Get the Shit Kicked Out of You!” in which contestants
are beaten up and humiliated for laughs. It resonates in the same way that the
rap scene does, for what are reality TV contests if not platforms for public
punishment? “You’re Fired.” “The Tribe Has Spoken.” “Ladies, There Is Only One
More Rose Left!” Those shows (and phrases) are ones that symbolically deprive
people of food and shelter and employment and even love, yet it’s all done as a
competitive sport. “Sorry To Bother You” merely suggests that these televisions
shows just cut to the chase and kick people in the balls instead.
In short, “Sorry To Bother You” spoofs a lot of important
targets, like telemarketing call centers, viral videos, and reality TV, but it
also takes on some less naturally humorous things, like over privileged white
men, creepy sales managers, and America’s prison industrial complex. It’s a
noble movie and a funny one too, similar in spirit and tone to the music that director/writer
Boots Riley’s music produced with his band the Coup. As critic Mark Kemp put it in his review of
the 2012 album of the same name (and the genesis of some of the characters in
this movie), Riley has “always been one of the few contemporary rappers who's
kept the spirit of Public Enemy and Dead Kennedys alive through years that have
watched rappers and rockers alike nearly sap punk and hip-hop of their searing
social commentary.”
As Kemp points out, the Coup’s work is both uber-political
and uber-danceable: songs like ‘The
Guillotine” and “I Want To Piss On Your Grave” and “Fat Cats Bigga Fish” merge danceable
fun beats and with a sharp and even jaundiced, view of the historical,
institutional, and global forces that conspire to keep a body down. This is the
band, you’ll remember, whose record “The Party” featured a cover image of the
Twin Towers being blown up – in May of 2001.
That same prescient spirit animates “Sorry To Bother You” throughout.
It does it in the scenes of union-busting, which bring to mind current teacher
strikes in Oklahoma and West Virginia, in the telemarketing scenes, which
invoke the intrusive reach of technology into our private lives, and finally, in the premise of a
company which will solve all health care, housing and wage problems in one
simple, final, solution.
In other words, “Sorry to Bother You” bothered me – but in a
good way, in the way we should all be bothered, constantly, by the incredible
hypocrisies and violations that surround us on the daily, but which seem to
slide on by, connived at and accepted by an increasingly spineless public.
Things like the fact that rape, child molestation and people blowing the heads
off little children aren’t even blinked at by our government. Things like the
double standards surrounding drug laws and jobs and housing and immigration and
education. Things like casually bombing Syria to distract from a stupid sex
scandal. Things like Taylor Swift releasing a ‘country tinged’ cover of the
song “September” by Earth Wind and Fire, as if there is not a single person anywhere
who had the courage, good taste, or just plain decency to tell her not to.
Obviously, Swift’s bad music decision isn’t on par with
bombing a country, but in a way it’s all of piece, in that people like her, who
have a shit ton of power, are never held accountable, and in any case just earn
money on whatever bullshit they perpetrate on the masses. Boots Riley’s art has
always been in opposition to that mindset, and surely we’ve never needed that
kind of moral rectitude more than we do now.
The film also features the enormously likable actors Danny
Glover, Terry Crews and Armie Hammer, and given this film’s dark content, I
think Hammer in particular should be commended for offering himself up as the
human embodiment of toxic white masculinity in a film like this. Buzzfeed
recently excoriated the poor guy for being a super-rich and privileged person
in real life, which I think is so unfair – no one asks to be born rich, any more
than they ask to be born poor. Hammer’s willingness to be the butt of this
movie is way more than most rich white guys do, so, respect.
I mention Hammer’s role in this film only because I’m a
white person myself, and some white people are turned off by films that critique
their participation in a racist culture. But although “Sorry To Bother You” is
a film made from an African American perspective, the vision of America that it
paints — the field of play, as it were — includes all of us, and that’s why all
of us should go see it. As Ta Nehesi
Coates writes in “Between The World and Me,” it’s not really the job of African
American community to convert white people – the people he calls ‘Dreamers” — into
warriors for the black cause; rather, he writes, “The Dreamers will have to
learn to struggle themselves, to understand that the field for their Dream, the
stage where they have painted themselves white, is the deathbed of us all.”
“Sorry To Bother You” makes that clear as day. Apology accepted.
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