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{"id":1139,"date":"2013-12-31T21:54:50","date_gmt":"2013-12-31T21:54:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.bryanbuser.com\/365moviesbyday\/?p=1139"},"modified":"2022-11-04T03:52:39","modified_gmt":"2022-11-04T03:52:39","slug":"12-years-a-slave","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/365moviesbyday.bryanbuser.com\/12-years-a-slave\/","title":{"rendered":"12 Years A Slave (2013)"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"12The typical moviegoer of America will soon be introduced to one of the next big names in feature film directing when the Academy Award nominations come out in a few weeks. Steve McQueen will undoubtedly earn a Best Director nomination for\u00a012 Years A Slave<\/em>, a movie that some say is the greatest movie about slavery ever told. While those who have seen the film have talked a lot about the acting (and rightfully so), this movie, like any great movie, needs a captain to steer the ship and bring the story together. McQueen does just that. In a few weeks, the typical moviegoer will ask what else McQueen directed. Well, this is just his third feature film. He has 23 “Shorts” that he is credited with directing, but only two feature-length films. But these two other films weren’t just any movies. Much like Christopher Nolan (The Dark Knight, Memento<\/em>), everything that McQueen has touched in his young career has had a purpose. He doesn’t have any “throw away” movies. The movies he has tackled thus far in his full-length directorial career have been on slavery, sex addiction (Shame<\/em><\/a>), and the true story of an Irish Republican Army activist who, in 1981, protested the way British guards were treating him and fellow inmates by embarking on, perhaps, the most internationally recognized hunger strike since Gandhi (Hunger<\/em>). While\u00a0Shame<\/a>\u00a0<\/em>and\u00a0Hunger<\/em>\u00a0earned critical acclaim, many people didn’t see them.\u00a0Shame<\/a>\u00a0<\/em>is a brilliant movie about the taboo topic of sex addiction. As a result, I expected much more when I saw\u00a0Hunger<\/em>\u00a0after this. While I appreciated many aspects of\u00a0Hunger<\/em>, I found it rather dull. So now, with\u00a012 Years A Slave<\/em>, McQueen has three movies I admire and two that I think are brilliant.
\n<\/p>\n

So who exactly is this Chiwetel Ejiofor? Did McQueen handpick him out of hundreds of established actors vying for the role, much like\u00a0Matthew McConaughey was in\u00a0Joel Schumacher’s\u00a0A Time To Kill<\/em>? The answer to that question is not really. He’s been around for a while. He had four Golden Globe nominations before being nominated for this movie. Three of these were for performances in television mini-series, but he is far from just an actor on the small screen. He has been in films such as\u00a0Salt, Children of Men, American Gangster, Inside Ma<\/em>n, and\u00a0Love Actually<\/em>. But when people hear the name\u00a0Chiwetel Ejiofor from now until eternity, the images from\u00a012 Years A Slave<\/em>\u00a0will immediately pop into their heads. So will Ejiofor win the Academy Award for Best Actor?<\/p>\n

I will say yes. As a whole, 2013 has been a down year for both movies and for stellar lead performances. Had\u00a012 Years A Slave<\/em>\u00a0been released in 2012, I don’t think\u00a0Ejiofor would have had a real chance to beat Daniel Day-Lewis for his performance in\u00a0Lincoln<\/em>. I’ve read various blogs and have seen a consensus of lead actors who will likely earn a nomination for Best Actor. This list includes\u00a0Ejiofor, Tom Hanks (Captain Phillips<\/em>), Robert Redford (All Is Lost<\/em>),\u00a0McConaughey (Dallas Buyer’s Club<\/em><\/a>), Bruce Dern (Nebraska<\/em>),\u00a0Joaquin Phoenix (Her<\/em>), and a couple of other long shots. I’ve seen\u00a0Captain Phillips, All Is Lost<\/em>, and\u00a0Dallas Buyer’s Club<\/em>\u00a0so far, and while the performances were good, they could have been better and certainly better than\u00a0Ejiofor’s. Dern seems like he will be the fifth person to lock up the slot, but I think he’s one of those guys, late in his career, where a nomination would be just as good as a win. The Academy does seem to love Phoenix, though, and I am intrigued by this movie. The trailers that show Phoenix looking so joyous are a stark contrast to his performances as of late. He could easily get a nod and be a real dark horse for the win, but this is\u00a0Ejiofor’s award to lose.<\/p>\n

Okay, I’ve discussed the amazing director and the fantastic lead performance. I’ll talk about the fabulous Michael Fassbender (who happens to be the lead actor in McQueen’s other two feature-length films) in a moment, but let’s get back to the plot for a moment. The year is 1841, and an African American named Solomon Northrup\u00a0(Ejiofor) is a free man living in New York. He is a happily married man with two young children. He is a stellar violinist. When his family goes away for a couple of weeks, Northrup is approached by two men who work in a traveling circus and promise him a hefty payday if he will go down to Washington DC with them and perform the violin with them at a few shows. He is promised an expense-paid return to New York at the end of his service. It almost seems too good to be true. Unfortunately, it is. Solomon is stripped of everything, his name has been changed to Platt, and the story is that he is a runaway slave from Georgia. He is eventually sold into slavery.<\/p>\n

Solomon (Platt) is a slave on two plantations for 12 years. He is a slave for a tender man named Ford (we don’t know how long for…and in this lies one of the movie’s problems…just how long is each segment? I honestly never fully knew if he was on Ford’s slave for a few months or a few years). He also works for a merciless slave named Epps (Michael Fassbender –\u00a0Shame<\/a><\/em>,\u00a0The Counselor<\/em>). Fassbender WILL earn an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for this film. I have yet to examine the other contenders, but I hope he will win. He is as villainous as any character you will meet on film this year. He is a ruthless, remorseless man who believes he is entitled to everything while everyone else is entitled to nothing. Epps has no redeemable qualities at all. Fassbender shows his range as an incredible actor. As a moviegoer, you are scared of him. He is unpredictable and cruel just for the sake of being cruel. You forget you are watching a movie and are terrified of what he might do next. You know it is not good for anybody near him when Epps is on screen, especially when he has been drinking. You have a hero in Solomon and a villain in Epps, and you won’t find more of a good versus the evil situation in any movie you will encounter this year.<\/p>\n

This is a very sad movie. Imagining that people could buy other people as slaves and treat them as property is a disgusting concept. Seeing it play out on the screen in such a visual manner will be uncomfortable, at best, and unwatchable for many. To see pieces of flesh fly into the air as a woman is being lashed was unbearable. I squirmed in my seat, trying to hold back the tears, unable to believe that this was an accepted practice many 150+ years ago. It is disgusting to believe that we did this in many parts of this great country and thought nothing more of it. Slavery was the only issue that ever divided our country into a flat-out war against each other. Thank goodness there were enough people to realize that slavery needed to be abolished and believed in it enough to fight their neighbor over it if their neighbor disagreed.<\/p>\n

I do think that there are things that we, as Americans, do now or have done in the past 10-25 years that people 150+ years from now will look back at some of the issues of today and be disbelieved how we handled them. I think there are some issues in our society that we could do a much better job on and, to a great degree, have done better on some. But none of these issues compare to how certain people treated non-freed Black Americans back in the early to mid-1800, and it would be inappropriate to address the issues of today here. But I did want to bring it up to say that we are still very far from being close to peThisy, with many divisive issues.<\/p>\n

I think\u00a012 Years a Slave<\/i>\u00a0is a movie everyone should try to see and preferably in the theater, although the theater experience probably isn’t that much better if you have a nice big flat screen in your home.<\/p>\n

*** Please just read this part only after you’ve seen the movie. If you want to see my overall score on it, the score is a 92.5%***<\/p>\n

Plot 10\/10
\nCharacter Development 8\/10 (while the acting was superb, I was completely lost by the time frame…maybe I wasn’t looking close enough, but\u00a0Ejiofor looked the same physically and age-wise at the start of the film as he did at the end…and 12 hard years, I think, would have a drastic impact on a person’s appearance…there were developments in his character that I was equally underwhelmed by…I put much more of the blame on McQueen than I do\u00a0Ejiofor, though.
\nCharacter Chemistry 10\/10\u00a0(the characters who you are supposed to love, you love…the characters who you are supposed to hate, you hate)
\nActing 10\/10 (what a cast… I’m curious if producer Brad Pitt realized early that this movie had the potential for Best Picture and decided he needed to put himself in the film…Pitt is excellent, but he had only two scenes, and when he finally did make an appearance, you knew everything might be okay for Solomon. If it was a lesser-known actor, you might have had to wait a little longer for this to play out)
\nScreenplay 8.5\/10
\nDirecting \u00a08.5\/10 (McQueen did a great job compressing 12 years into two hours…yet I was often lost about how long he had been at which plantation and whatnot. The flashbacks were brilliant. However, I thought the movie got a little slow in the middle)
\nCinematography 10\/10
\nSound 9\/10
\nHook and Reel 9\/10
\nUniversal Relevance 9.5\/10 (I need a reminder of where I read this. I won’t take credit for it, but it resonated with me. The critic said that this movie is essential to watch once and nearly impossible to watch more than once)
\n92.5%<\/p>\n

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