12 Years A Slave -film- -
Epps’ plantation is a hellscape of relentless labor. McQueen’s camera does not flinch. We feel the razor-sharp edges of cotton bolls cutting into Solomon’s fingers. We hear the rhythmic thud of the lash on naked backs. In one breathtaking long take, the camera lingers on Patsey (a transcendent Lupita Nyong’o) as she begs Solomon to kill her, to end her torment. Nyong’o’s performance—all fragile beauty and volcanic despair—earned her an Oscar, but more importantly, it gives a face and a voice to the millions of enslaved women whose suffering was routinely erased from the historical record. In a lesser film, the arrival of a white Canadian abolitionist (Brad Pitt as Samuel Bass) would signal a triumphant third-act rescue. But McQueen subverts this trope. Bass is sympathetic, but he is also hesitant, scared, and shockingly naive about the world he lives in. His “goodness” is nearly useless against the entrenched power of the slaveocracy. The film argues that individual morality is a frail shield against systemic evil. Bass’s ultimate decision to mail a letter to Solomon’s family is an act of immense courage, but the film dwells on the years of waiting, the crushing possibility that the letter was lost, that no one was coming.
12 Years a Slave is not a film about guilt. It is a film about truth. And the truth, as Solomon Northup learned, is that the only thing more horrifying than cruelty is the silence that allows it to continue. This film broke that silence. It remains essential viewing, not because it is comfortable, but because it is true. 12 years a slave -film-
He is free. But he will never be free. To watch 12 Years a Slave is to endure it. That is the point. It is not “entertainment” in the conventional sense; it is an act of cinematic archaeology, unearthing the bones of a national sin that America has never fully acknowledged. Steve McQueen directs with a pitiless, painterly eye (the cinematography by Sean Bobbitt is breathtakingly beautiful, which only makes the ugliness more potent). The supporting cast, including Paul Dano, Sarah Paulson, and Paul Giamatti, populate the margins with memorable viciousness. Epps’ plantation is a hellscape of relentless labor

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