Page 10 DTH Omnibus Thursday December 3, 1992 Malcolm X Denzel Washington, Spike Lee directed by Spike Lee Plaza 967-4737 We sent senior Omnibus writer lan Williams and assistant Black Ink editor Jacqueline Charles to see Malcolm X. (Yeah, he's white, she's black.) Here's what they came up with: IW: Do you think that the swirl of hype and merchandise surrounding this movie is giving it completely unreal expectations, or do you think it mat ters? JC: Oh, I don't think it matters. I loved it. 1 didn't know what to expect going in, since there was so much talk one way or another, but it didn't mat ter. I thought it was great. 1W: The three hours go by quickly it was probably just the right length. JC: Scenes just grab you, even after they pass. You're still experiencing the last scene while the next one gets you. Everything is so charged with emotion. IW: Probably the hardest thing to do in a film is portray someone, particu larly a powerful public figure like Malcolm X, going through a huge tran sition in the way he thinks. Especially without seeming goofy or wishy-washy. When Malcolm goes from being vehe mently separatist to feeling a sense of brotherhood, Spike Lee screenplays it really well. JC: It was very realistic. You can't put someone's entire life into a movie, even if it is three hours, but the way Malcolm changes it was well done. It was mostly through letters to his wife from Mecca. When he gets back to America and gives his press confer- RIVER RUNS ROUGH "A FLASH DEBUT! Plcki up where Scorsese's Hein Streets' left Off!" -JmIWrmw PKEWEK RESERVOIR DOGS 304B W. WEAVER STREET CARRBORO 968-8482 nuvv umN Save2iJ 10.11 nan V I tICIU RENTALS J it I I LniL i I FOR $10 I WITH THIS AD MOVIES RENT FOR S2S1 I THE ONLY VIDEO ALTERNATIVE FOR I DISCERNING TASTES I FREE membership with MTTj 7 00 . 9 30 2 00, A 30) j mm mm 'R 7io 910 i? m : ic mimJ Lot, 'Malcolm mm I ; IAN WILLIAMS & JACQUELINE CHARLES ence, you know, his turnaround isn't some sort of big shock. IW: I remember in the book itself, there was a lot more concentration on Malcolm's youth, like his mother, fa ther and schooling. That stuff was more powerful to me than almost anything else, but Spike Lee concentrates on everything post-adolescence. JC: Well, if he concentrated on the childhood, I mean, anyone could watch this movie and say, "So he had a bad childhood who hasn't?" But by con centrating on his faults as a teenager and adult, it makes us see Malcolm as a real person. IW: I think the reason Malcolm X is so hard for some whites and even blacks to deal with is that he was so hard to pin down. You can't really say he was a racist and you can't say he was terribly open-minded when it came to white folks. The only way to get his feelings across was to tell his story with out getting in the way of it, and I think Spike Lee did that really well. There were no . . . JC: Huge gaps. IW: ... and he never told the audi ence what to think. I never thought he abused his power as a filmmaker here, and he had all kinds of chances. A lot of his other films have pissed me off just for that reason. JC: Well, all of his films have dealt with social issues, they were sort of studies, like Jungle Fever and Do the Right Thing. This was a biography. IW: Did anything bother you at all in this movie? JC: There was this one thing that sort of confused me. You were talking transformations and transitions, and I thought that the man in prison who taught Malcolm the ways of Elijah Mohammed was good, but . . . IW: What was his name? JC: I think it was Baines or some thing. In the book, it's Reginald. Any way, I wished his character had been more consistent, because he appeared out of nowhere at the end. Only this time he was mostly a bad character I wish I had some type of indication where he had been all that time. IW: The prison sequences were so good that I was a little startled by the apparition of Elijah Mohammed in iHorne Alone 2 1:00 2:00. 3:45 4:30 SatSun 7:00 7:15 9:30 9:45 nightly (PC) On Two Screens 4 Under Seige no passes or coupons 2:00 4:1 5 satsun 7:009:15 nightly 't.fi.iwii niil - mm, -nrr inmr Malcolm's prison cell. That hologram totally reminded me of those scenes in Star Wars when Obi-Wan Kenobi comes back to dole out advice. "Turn off the computer Malcolm. Use the force ..." JC: Yeah, although the voice-over during scenes like that saves them, puts them into petspective. IW: The movie has a good sense of humor in places. JC: Another thing that might be a problem were those scenes that have that "Spike Lee signature" like Malcolm's face turning upside down, and people walking down streets with out looking like their legs are moving. IW: He did that in Jungle Fever too. JC: You get so engrossed in the movie that these things jerk you out into real ity. IW: I'm torn between thinking that those "signatures" are self-indulgent Spike Lee-isms that get in the way of the movie, or else they are simply the cinematic spice that makes the whole movie different and cool. By the time Spike Lee starts messing with the cam era here, though, Malcolm X has al ready become obsessed with his own death, getting kind of paranoid and OMNIBUS Because when you say, "Cow ya doin'?" we won't say, "How ya doin'?" U Spike Lee: Guess his favorite letter psychotic. I guess if your main character is getting psychotic, the filmmaker gets to as well. JC: One thing I was impressed with was Denzel Washington. He is such an amazing actor. IW: I mean, he was almost indistin guishable from the real thing. It would take me an hour to explain how forceful and subtle he was. JC: The scene with Betty Shabazz, Malcolm's wife, when they have their first fight, when the reality of the situ ation starts to crash down around them, it was fantastic. Also when Malcolm is about to be converted to Islam in prison, it happens so gradually. Malcolm doesn't automatically kneel, he waits it's not like ... boom! Welcome to Islam! IW: That's the most impressive part of this movie it has real restraint. This movie will be put on the table next to JFK, which was the white man's three-hour version of his cultutal icon assassinated in the '60s. And Malcolm X is less judgmental, less maddening and totally less manipulative than JFK. JC: As a black person, it got me redefining myself. It won't alienate any black people, it uses more of the "Pan African" idea of people like W.E.B. DuBois. The struggle isn't about blacks just in America, it's about blacks all over the world. Mandela's speech at the ma wait for the video go to the dollar theater only pay matinee price pay full price take your sitter, too DEBBIE STENGEL photo end showed that so well. I W: What about white people ? A lot of my friends had that hang-their-head-in-shame thing going when they got out of the Plaza theater. Is that a good thing or bad thing? JC: I'm in no position really to say. This movie is about defining your role in the whole problem of racism, and having an opinion. I mean, everybody should go see this movie, because whether you're black or white or what ever, you're going to come out feeling different than when you came in. You will have some sort of emotion, and whether it's anger, pride, or shame, any emotion that you have ... IW: At least it's something. JC: ... at least it's something. ---nnr I) i i n i i n 'J figure! Indicate total grass 1. Home Alone 2 $74.2 miliion, 2 weeks 2. Aladdin W:: $25.8 million, 3 mks 3. The Bodyguard $24.4 million, 1week 4. Bram Stoker's Dracula v ::' ; $70, 1 million, 3 mks 5. Malcolm X ; ; ;: $26,9 million, 2 weeks 6. Passenger 57 t:3- $33.2 million, 4 mkSfCWM 7. A River Runs Through It $28.3 million, 8 weeks .M:iM0 8. Under Siege :M&.$72A million, 8 weekSXiSB 9. The Last of the Mohicans $67.9 million, 10 weeks ID. The Mighty Ducks W.$44Amillpi9yiMfMi