'The Hate U Give' movie takes on racism, police brutality
The Toronto film festival cast a spotlight over the weekend on racism
and police brutality in director George Tillman Jr.'s "The Hate U Give."



Applauded by critics and audiences alike, the adaptation of the
best-selling young adult novel by Angie Thomas is "a timely commentary
in the Black Lives Matter era," said the festival's youth committee that
chose to screen the movie.
"We are, through this film, protesting police brutality," said Amandla
Stenberg who plays Starr, a teenage girl seeking her voice while living a
dual life -- growing up in a tough black neighborhood while attending a
predominantly white prep school in another part of town in hopes of a
safe and better future.
"Hopefully what it does is, make black people, black girls feel
validated, feel empowered, feel strong, and stand up for their truth,"
she said.
"And hopefully it brings some light to these events, and evokes empathy
in people to have real dialogue about it, from a real place instead of
just understanding these events in a topical and sometimes desensitized
manner."
The film opens with Starr's father (played by Russell Hornsby) trying to
instill black pride in her and her siblings at a very young age, while
also warning them of potential perils of being black, for example, how
to navigate a police encounter -- what Hornsby described to reporters as
a chilling lesson for a child.
At school, although her classmates adopt the slang and clothing of black
Americans, she is more circumspect about her cultural heritage.
"Slang makes them look cool, but it makes me look hood," she says in the film.
Back in her neighborhood, she is forced to flee a weekend house party
broken up by gunshots, which is presented as an unfortunate normality in
the community.
A childhood friend, Khalil (Algee Smith), offers to drive her home, but
it all goes sideways during a routine traffic stop when Khalil is shot
dead by a white police officer as the 17-year-old boy reaches for a
hairbrush.
Investigating police seek to blame the victim, and by association Starr,
while a local gang leader presses her to keep quiet for fear of being
implicated, and a civil rights lawyer urges her to testify before a
grand jury in hopes of getting justice for Khalil.
- Black Lives Matter movement -
Such killings in the United States, publicised by smartphone and police
video, have given rise to the Black Lives Matter movement.
But prosecutions, let alone guilty verdicts, have proven rare.
At a press conference, author Angie Thomas said: "It is important to
speak up and speak out, especially in moments of injustice."
But too often, she explained, black people in impoverished and
crime-ridden neighborhoods in the United States do not feel safe coming
forward.
"Not snitching is a survival tactic," she said.
"There is no witness protection for people who talk about what happens
in the neighborhood," echoed Anthony Mackie, who plays gang leader King
in the film.
"As a community, as a people, as men, our job is to protect women and
children and in this generation we have failed miserably," he said.
"So until we do our job, the idea of speaking out about what's happening
in our community is practically impossible because there's no one to
protect you."
The film, which will be released in theatres on October 19, also stars
Issa Rae, Regina Hall, Sabrina Carpenter, rapper Common, KJ Apa and
Lamar Johnson.
"Hunger Games" actress Stenberg was assailed on social media for not
being "black enough" when she was cast in the role, but delivers a
stellar performance.
"It was the first time in my life that I'd had my blackness questioned,"
she said in Toronto. "Ironically it's something that Starr faces in the
film."
"It's been hard," she acknowledged. "But I have a great sensitivity
towards the place from which that comes. It's a place of pain, it's a
result of people being frustrated because they are navigating a colorist
system at all times. And that's painful."
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