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Gazetas, Aristides, 1930- . Imagining selves : the politics of representation, film narratives, and adult education / Aristides Gazetas. 0820445665 (pbk.) series New York : Peter Lang, c2000.
 
 
Aristides Gazetas’ Imagining Selves: the Politics of Representation, Film Narrative, and Adult Education" offers a metaphysic perspective of the representation of reality in cinema. In its third chapter, “Film Narratives and Historical Representation”, the author explores the way cinema diffuse precise cultural discourses, or, in other words, what Jean Baudrillard calls a “politics of representation.” As a powerful means of visual information, cinema spreads particular imaginaries: through film narratives, it proposes definitions of cultural identities and the Other. As a result, it heavily influences our way to understand the world.
However, the rise of postmodernist theory (Lyotard) challenges and criticizes the given metanarratives enforced by the mainstream discourse. Postmodernist sensibility suggests a deconstruction of any foundational conceptions of knowledge. It opposes the indoctrination, the imposing of social representations operated by the saturation of rhetoric images hidden in the cinematographic medium. By reformulating the approach to these images, post-structural discourses give way to the complexity and multiplicity of the reality.

“Film Narratives and Historical Representation” provides a theoretical understanding of the articulation of Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song in its discursive and historical context. The film appears as initiating a new way of cinematic representation which breaks with the positivist dominant discourse. Through a deconstruction of the images of Black people or the use of collage/bricolage (and through maybe its French New Wave influence), Van Peebles opposes the mainstream discourse and frontally displays the complexity of the world. He presents a distinct mode of representation which allows a multiplicity in the interpretation of reality. The director abandons the former “total representation” which “solidify” any identity in a type. If not directly addressing Van Peebles’ production, Gazetas proposes a powerful theoretical perspective on the philosophical stakes raised by Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song.

Van Peebles, Melvin, 1932- . Sweet Sweetback's baadasssss song : a guerilla filmmaking manifesto / Melvin Van Peebles. 1560256338 (pbk.) series New York : Thunder's Mouth Press, c2004.
Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song: a Guerilla Manifesto is the personal account of Melvin Van Peebles on the chaotic production of his independent movie. It gets onto the initial motivations and the fundamental commandments that will determine his film: Black characters would be victorious, the film had to be entertaining and commercially viable to spread its message, the casting should include 50% of inexperienced actors… Then, Van Peebles recounts the nineteen days of the production phase and the multiple incredible events that punctuated it: the use of what he calls “globs” to shoot efficiently, the management of amateur actors, the contraction of gonorrhea by filming sex scenes, the stunts performed by the director himself... It eventually presents the problem of the film’s distribution, with its first release in only two theaters in Detroit.

The book shows the hectic context of Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song’s production and the difficulties at the time to shoot an independent Black movie. With a florid language and sense of humor, Van Peebles provides a view “from within” on the conception, financing, directing, editing and distribution of his movie. Thus replacing the production of the movie in its historical framework, the book comes back to the time when Black people were depicted only through Hollywood paternalistic and racist stereotypes and when everything had to be done for an African American to be completely in control of his work. It is also a testimony of a production phase that revealed itself to be as chaotic as the movie itself.

Yearwood, Gladstone Lloyd. . Black film as a signifying practice : cinema, narration and the African American aesthetic tradition / Gladstone L. Yearwood. 0865437149 series Trenton, NJ : Africa World Press, c2000.

The Chapter 6 of Gladstone L. Yearwood’s Black Film as a Signifying Practice offers an in-depth semiotic analyis of Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song aesthetic. The author underlines on Van Peebles’ refusal to conform himself in Hollywood cinematic grammar. Van Peebles indeed frontally attacks the illusion perpetuated by mainstream cinema by breaking with all its techniques. To this extent, rather than laying the emphasis on the plot progress, he quasi exclusively focuses on political and ideological questions. He uses stereotypes, but only to deprive them from their consensual values to move away from them, and successively to challenge the traditional perceptions about race. This work of deconstruction of character types conventions allows a complex depiction of the reality.

In the same manner, Yearwood studies the juxtaposition of images and sounds which introduces not only singular editing techniques but also particular meanings. The director’s will to work outside of Hollywood parameters contributes to create a whole new cinematographic experience.

The author also proposes a particular understanding of the sexual question in Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song. While Lerone Bennett criticized the sexual depiction of the main character, Yearwood rather sees a rupture in both social and cinematographic terms in the way sex is featured on the screen.

“Narrative Transformation in Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song” provides a deep study of the film aesthetic and its subversion of the mainstream parameters. Through a dialectic analysis, the author explores the subtle and sometimes hidden meanings present in the director’s mise-en-scène and editing and reasserts the film as groundbreaking both in social and cinematographic terms.

Surowiecki, James, Making It, Transition, No. 79, 1999, 176-192

 

This conversation with Van Peebles offers a intimate perspective on the trajectory of Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song’s director and his approach of cinema. The text begins with a presentation of the artist, underlining the multiplicity of his activities, from painter to first Black trader in Hollywood to American expatried in Europe. It explains his personal vision on the articulation of race in the United States and its interpretation on screen: in films like Watermelon Man or Sweet Sweetback, race is considered as an quasi exclusive social condition. It also sheds a new light on the singular acting of Van Peebles, whose expressionless acting was considered as especially bad. The article rather analyzes this un-expressiveness as political, a means to assert that the main character is only the product of social determinism, showing an almost Brechtian sensibility. In parallel, it also explores the influence of the French New Wave on his aesthetics.

The conversation in itself gets unto Van Peebles’ awareness of the impact of Sweet Sweetback on Black cinema with the director developing his particular considerations about the blaxploitation genre. He offers his understanding of the character of Sweetback and his trajectory and evolution throughout the movie, from an underclass passivity to political consciousness.

Later on, Van Peebles deals with his smart marketing strategy and the obstacles that he faced during the production and distribution phases, and with censorship.

This article proves to be interesting regarding Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song inasmuch as it provides rare insights of the director’s approach to his film. While Van Peebles does not like to talk about the aesthetics of his creations, here he presents certain crucial aspects of his filmmaking methods.

 

 

Bates, Courtney E. J., "Sweetback's 'Signifyin(g)' Song: Mythmaking in Melvin Van Peebles' Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song." Quarterly Review of Film and Video [1050-9208] 24.2 (2007). 171-.
In this article, Courtney E.J. Bates presents a semiotic analysis of Melvin Van Peebles’ Sweet Sweetback’s Badaasssss Song. The author particularly studies the film’s dichotomy between the mainstream cinematographic style used and the distinctive African American codes of cultural references. The first blaxploitation movie appears indeed to “appropriate” many characteristics of Hollywood (action or Western movies for instance) narrative structure. However, this mainstream origin is “subverted” by the use of typically African American myth features.

She particularly studies the two different classical figures embodied by Sweetback: the Trickster and the Badman. The merging of these two signifying references allows the (anti-)hero to oppose the Man – the Whites in general -, as a mythic figure struggling against oppression. The particular character of Sweetback, ambiguous and amoral, distinguishes thus himself from the unquestionable goods and villains.

The absence of linear structure in Sweet Sweetback’s Badaasssss Song (loose cohesiveness, repetition…) is also a characteristics of African American myth-making and directly contradicts the dominant Hollywood narrative form.

Van Peebles operates thus a reversal from the mainstream clean cinematographic techniques and narrative structures (linearity, typology of characters) to create a really transgressive film which relies on multiple African American storytelling characteristics. All these “signifyings”, combined with mainstream elements, tend to challenge the dominant framework of understanding cinema.

This article presents an in-depth and strongly referenced semiotic analysis of Sweet Sweetback’s Badaasssss Song which goes beyond the mere contextual understanding of the film. By studying the set of African American codes and isolating their different meanings and significances, Bates sheds a new light focused on the film itself and its relationship to African American culture.
Van Peebles, Melvin, "Lights, Camera & The Black Role In Movies." Ebony [0012-9011] 61.1 (2005). 92-.


Thirty four years after Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song’s release in the theaters, its author, director, producer, soundtrack-composer Melvin Van Peebles reviews the impact of his film , replacing it in the historical framework of the particular relationship of African Americans with the cinema industry.

Van Peebles begins with the primary inconsistent descriptions of Black people in Hollywood’s movies, from the “buffonesque” pre-war image to the moralistic figure of the “New Negro”, which hypocritically still presented the old racist and paternalistic attitude. While Black characters were more or less present , the whole cinema industry did not open itself to Black directors, actors and cinema workers. As a result, until the end of the 1960s, Black audiences did not crowd in theaters. Van Peebles’ arrival in San Francisco as a French delegate to present his first film set up a new deal by opening the studios to Black artists. However, the succeeding blaxploitation wave, if directly appealing to the African American audiences, constituted according to Van Peebles a reactionary reversal of the first “Black films” of the 1970s to maintain a status quo. The director had to wait the 1990s to see a “new wave” of young Black directors to eventually see a new “artistic diversity”, with Black directors and actors involved in every part of the cinematic landscape. The article ends with a point of view on the current state of Hollywood and the need for democratizing the production of films, now permitted by the new technologies.

“Lights, Camera & The Black Role In Movies” provides a lucid personal view “from within” about the tremendous impact of Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song on the cinema industry. It replaces the landmark movie in its historical framework and underlines the personal motivations of its director who had faced a particularly bad treatment of Black role in movies.