Variety Reviews - The Black Power Mixtape: 1967-1975 - Film Reviews -

A Story, Louverture Films and Svenges Television production. Produced by
Annika Rogell. Executive producer, Tobias Janson. Co-producers, Joslyn
Barnes, Danny Glover. Directed, written by Goran Hugo Olsson.

With: Stokely Carmichael, Eldridge Cleaver, Bobby Seale, Angela Davis,
Huey P. Newton, Louis Farrakhan, Erykah Badu, John Forte, Abiodun
Oyewole, Melvin Van Peebles, Kathleen Cleaver, Harry Belafonte, Talib
Kweli, Robin Kelley.
"The Black Power Mixtape: 1967-1975" is appropriately titled: Like any
mixtape, it offers some truly transcendent moments alongside a
smattering of filler, and never quite assembles its pieces into a
cohesive whole. Featuring reels of long-lost documentary and news
footage of black activists lensed by Swedish journalists, the film could
be of great academic interest, though probably not much more.
Covering the period from the rise of the Black Power movement to the
beginning of the inner-city drug plague that tore it apart, the
filmmakers have excavated some remarkable moments from the archives. A
jailhouse interview with cause celebre Angela Davis displays the wrongly
accused professor's intense erudition even in the face of appalling
treatment; a black-and-white segment of famed activist Stokely
Carmichael interviewing his own mother is touching; and a sit-down chat
with Louis Farrakhan on the eve of his rise to power in the Nation of
Islam shows the leader's serpentine charm already eerily intact.

One of the more interesting factors here is that all the footage is
presented in a completely Swedish context, meaning that scenes of
poverty in Harlem are framed in much the same way that American TV news
would present starvation in Ethiopia. But this also means that certain
elements are lost in translation, or seemingly misunderstood. A long
segment regarding a TV Guide critique of Swedish television reps the
most confusing inclusion, though it does generate some laughs with its
earnest description of TV Guide as "the most popular magazine in
America" over B-roll of pedestrians reading the rag while walking
through Times Square.

Voiceover commentary is provided by a grab bag of figures past and
present, ranging from the eloquent (Davis again, Last Poets member
Abiodun Oyewole, Harry Belafonte) to the perplexing (Talib Kweli).
Original music from the Roots bandleader Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson and
Om' Mas Keith is groovy.

Camera (color/B&W, 16mm); editors, Hanna Lejonqvist, Goran Hugo Olssen;
music, Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson, Om' Mas Keith; art director, Stefania
Malmsten; sound, Anders Nystrom. Reviewed at Sundance Film Festival
(competing), Jan. 21, 2011. Running time: 97 MIN.

(English, Swedish dialogue)

Contact the variety newsroom at  [email protected]

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http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117944444/
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