Personally, I'm glad to be in the theatre and not in the stands. Having myself observed racism first hand, it would surely ruin a nice day at the ballpark, to say the least. It is difficult enough experiencing vitriolic racism in a movie based on real experiences.
Sportswriter Wendell Smith (Andre Holland) |
This is the actual Jackie Robinson. |
Rachel Robinson (Nicole Beharie) |
baseball action; I really love it, being a baseball fan. The actors caught the real people. Rachel Robinson (actress Nicole Beharie) is intelligent, beautiful, educated, classy. A girl from Pasadena, Cal., thrust into old school racism. Harrison Ford's character, Branch Rickey, keeps saying he brought Robinson into the organization for the money--is that really so? Ford gives a layered performance to a complex man.
Baseball managers had wished they could integrate the game for decades. Check out Ken Burns' documentary "Baseball," free Netflix trial.
Ken Burns: Baseball
http://movies.netflix.com/WiMovie/70202575?locale=en-US&mqso=81000230&awmatchtype=p&awnetwork=g&awcreative=21630873068&awkeyword=ken%20burns%20baseball&awposition=1t1&awexpid=&gclid=CO3n7e-XzrYCFcF_QgodOTgAUQ
But it took Rickey to do it.Will this movie help racism to recede? Will this movie create more resiliency and dignity for folks young and old who suffer injustice? I hope so. I pray so.
If you wish, there is a 1950 film called "The Jackie Robinson Story," (The Jackie Robinson Story http://www.youtube.com/movie/the-jackie-robinson-story) starring Jackie himself, that includes more background. Free on youtube. How cool is that?
Jackie Robinson (Chadwick Boseman) and Branch Rickey (Harrison Ford.) in the movie 42. |
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