By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (July 1st 2020)
The systemic
racism and flagrant discrimination against people of color that still exists,
especially in the southern parts of the US, could not be more artfully
portrayed than in the new Outlier Society -- Warner Bros feature film, ‘Just
Mercy’. It stars Jamie Fox as Walter McMillian, a black man sitting on death
row, convicted for a murder of a white woman that he did not commit and Michael
B Jordan, who played the ‘bad brother’ Killmonger who came to Wakanda to seize
the throne from his half-brother in ‘Black Panther’. As Bryan Stevenson, Jordon
plays the Harvard-trained civil rights lawyer who’s made it his life mission to
liberate innocent black men from the shackles of post-modern slavery that finds
them incarcerated and inexorably lined up on death row in the USA.
‘Just Mercy’
is a film that’s sure to debunk any illusion that one might still hold that
America is the ‘home of the free’. It’s a film that’s right on time as the
world (including many Americans) wake up to what’s been described as America’s
‘original sin’, that is the enslavement of African people starting as far back
as 1619 when the first Africans were brought in bondage to Richmond, Virginia.
The ‘I can’t
breathe’ murder of George Floyd effectively illustrated the ongoing nature of
systemic racism and the life-threatening nature of black people’s everyday
lives. It’s also amplified the role of the Black Lives Matter social movement
in further raising national and international awareness of the need to finally
challenge the systems that have historically oppressed people of color in order
that they finally may be free.
Based on
Bryan Stevenson’s award-winning memoir, ‘Just Mercy: a story of justice and
redemption’, the film is unabashed in its portrait of racism and the
mean-spirited extent to which white people will go to keep black people
enslaved in one way or other. But the film also presents the power of hope and
the value of persistence and perseverance, qualities that Stevenson has in
abundance. Against all odds, he defiantly outwits the entire racist system by
ultimately trusting the rule of law as well as a higher power.
Racists
largely stole the rule of law in Alabama where the story is set, with Stevenson
meeting roadblock after roadblock with inexhaustible energy and indefatigable ingenuity.
Everyone in town has been corrupted by racism (which is why it’s seen as
systemic). From the local sheriff to the judge hearing the solid evidence that
Stevenson unearths to prove Walter’s innocence, the system is rigged,
entrenched to ensure Walter and Stevenson won’t win. But the lawyer perseveres
and ultimately, ‘Just Mercy’ is about the triumphant power of hope and grace.
The acting
of both Michael B Jordan and Jamie Foxx was deeply affecting. Just watching the
film’s trailer is weep-able. The injustice of centuries is finally being
exposed even as the film proves the transformative power of art to illustrate
powerful stories that are highly instructive and inspirational as well.
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