Saturday, June 26, 2004
 
One of These Is Not Like The Others

From a CNN review of the movie White Chicks:
    From 1986's "Soul Man" to last month's "Soul Plane," racial stereotypes have been the backbone of comedies good and bad. Makeup-induced transformations are nothing new, either, whether in 1964's "Black Like Me" or Murphy's phlegmy turn as an old Jewish man in 1988's "Coming To America."
Although Black Like Me was made into a movie, it was not a comedy; as a matter of fact, it was a "based on a true story" thing, based on John Griffith's book of the same name. It wasn't humor.

To include it in a list of comedy movies denigrates what Griffith did and the sacrifices he made to experience the south as a black man--ultimately, his treatments to darken his skin might have contributed to his death later.

Ah, the beauty of blogging: I can focus on a throw-away line with an intense lens to show its flaws. It's just a throwaway line, but much of what people retain from reviews and other articles are the throwaway lines, which often Gestalt into an incomplete and inaccurate picture.


 
To say Noggle, one first must be able to say the "Nah."