SeeingBlack.com
Uzikee Art/Sculpture
Uzikee Art/Sculpture
Michael Colbert
We Gotta Have It!
Search

Movies/TV Last Updated: Aug 13th, 2008 - 11:23:37


The Black Superhero
By Esther Iverem--SeeingBlack.com Editor and Film Critic
Jul 2, 2008, 10:39

Email this article
 Printer friendly page
Is the Black superhero finally getting some love?

Twenty years of the “new wave” of Black film has given us—finally—a decent list of Black superheroes on the big screen. There is the woefully underrated Meteor Man, X-men’s Storm, Blade, the foolish Blankman played by Damon Wayans, the obscure Steel played by Shaquille O’Neal, Frozone from “The Incredibles,” Morpheus and Niobe from “The Matrix” and maybe the jedi knight Mace Windu from “Star Wars.” In 2008, we can add to this list a drunken, dysfunctional dude named Hancock.

Whether actor Will Smith or director Peter Berg intended it or not, their movie will bear the burden (and microscope) of all our heroes on the screen. Some questions are easy and obvious. Why does Hancock have to be a drunk? Why can’t he find a Black woman superhero mate? (whoa, wouldn’t THAT be a novelty!) Why can’t he be bigger than life and have more grace and wisdom than a mere mortal?

But some answers are also easy. Looking just at this summer, for example, it is obvious that the days of the noble superhero are over. With the obnoxious but high-powered Iron Man still drawing raves and the aloof millionaire Bruce Wayne about to join us again as “The Dark Knight,” it is obvious that we movie-goers like our superheroes with flaws and shortcomings. As a matter a fact, we seem to insist that they have mortal vulnerability just to make things interesting.

We certainly get out share of foibles with Hancock, who has chosen Los Angeles as his place to fight crime. The problem is that most of the time, he is inebriated and, in the process of fighting crime, he seems to create more problems than he solves. During one of these fiascos, he saves the life of a public relations specialist named Ray (Jason Bateman), who recognizes that the rude and crude Hancock needs some image improvement and a stint in superhero charm school. The collaboration between Hancock and Ray yields twists in the plot that keep our attention and reinforce Smith’s position as a mega movie star who is expected to transcend Hollywood and real-life signs and boundaries of race.

If, like me, you are a Will Smith fan, you will be more likely to both like his performance and much of what is offered here in a larger-than-life style that includes high-speed highway chases, high-speed superhero flights through the Los Angeles skyline and one mega showdown between Hancock and another superhero. Smith shows his continued versatility as an artist who can do more than swagger or be a funnyman. So, at moments, he is able to offer us something touching that feels filled with heart and not just with special effects, (as in last week’s “Wanted”).

The criminals and villains are not all people of color. (Check). “Hancock” does not glorify either criminals or the police/prison-industrial complex. (Check). The superhero gets to wear a cool suit. (Check) The superhero gets to put on some cool shades (Check). The superhero confronts his demons and vulnerabilities and does his best his kick the bad guy’s ass. (Check).


This review also appeared on Tom Joyner's BlackAmericaWeb.com,/i>

You can order Esther Iverem's critically praised We Gotta Have It: Twenty Years of Seeing Black at the Movies, 1986-2006 (Thunder’s Mouth Press, April 2007)at Amazon.com or purchase at your favorite bookstore. It makes a wonderful gift! Thanks!

Read and search hundreds of reviews on SeeingBlack.com's Movies/TV channel and archive.

Click here to post a comment or your own review.


© Copyright 2006 SeeingBlack.com

Top of Page

We Gotta Have It!
Movies/TV
Latest Headlines
Hanging on "The Wire"
War and Sleaze
Catch That Mummy!
An Old "X-Files"
The Lost 'Dark Knight'
The Black Alien
The Black Superhero
Ballers, Shot-Callers
The Moving Film Festival
Doofuses Unite!
Do-It-Yourself Horror
More 'Sex and the City'
'Indiana' Bombs Again
Back to Fairytale Narnia
A Fighter's Heart
Gaye's Genius and Demons
Rich (White) Guys Rule!
New Orleans--Old and New
Visitors to a Strange Land
88 Bi-Polar Minutes
Here Comes the Po-Po!
Lights, Camera, and Africa
The Black World in Film
War That Won’t Let You Go