Malcolm X - PG-13
Common Sense Note
Parents should know that kids will see a graphic assassination, firebombing, a game of Russian roulette, and racially motivated brutality. They'll also hear much racially-charged language. Whites are called "devils" and blacks are called far worse in this frank portrait of the times.
Families who see this film might discuss the advantages and limitations of using movies to dramatize the lives of famous or important people. Can movies tell the story of lives in ways that other media, such as books or radio, can't? Where do they fall short? For example, are the conversations dramatized onscreen what was really said? How much of a life can you tell in a few hours, and how do you decide what to leave out?
Common Sense Review
Reviewed By: Scott G. Mignola
Following Malcolm X's evolution from criminal to religious convert to prominent spokesman for the Nation of Islam, this movie is an insightful and well-rounded portrait of a man some called a hate monger, others a world-shaking spiritual leader.
His home burned to the ground, his minister father murdered, Malcolm Little is taken from his family at an early age to flounder and eventually find opportunity in crime. A long prison sentence turns his life around, for behind bars he meets a man named Baines, who teaches him self-respect and enlightenment through the teachings of Black Muslim leader Elijah Muhammad.
Back on the streets, Malcolm sheds his last name and preaches that 400 years of oppression is enough. He tells his congregation not to hate the white man, but to love themselves, to respect themselves, to defend themselves -- by any means necessary. After a pilgrimage to the holy city of Mecca makes him see that different races can indeed live together harmoniously, his philosophy changes, but not before the hatred he's sparked turns against him.
Based on The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Spike Lee's chronicle of the rise and fall of the outspoken -- and still-controversial -- civil rights leader isn't the angry film one might expect.
Perhaps the film's greatest achievement is the fair-mindedness with which it treats its subject. Lee is honest in giving us a flawed hero, a man blinded by his cause, a leader unafraid to publicly denounce his own philosophies as he awakens to new and more hopeful ones.
The movie does an excellent job, too, of stressing the importance of education, reminding us that we each have the power not just to change our own life, but the lives of many. That's a terrific seed to plant in the heads of high school students looking toward college and a future career.
As with Gandhi, another outstanding true story with similar themes, the movie's lengthy running time doesn't seem at all extravagant, but rather necessary to give a complex life the dimension it deserves.
Denzel Washington turns in a stunning, dignified performance without ever seeming like he's acting. As his wife, Angela Bassett is also outstanding, as are Albert Hall and Al Freeman Jr. as the men who give his life purpose.
Families with younger children may want to try an animated introduction the civil rights movement, Our Friend Martin, which chronicles the life of Martin Luther King, Jr. Washington fans may also enjoy A Soldier's Story, which deals with race issues during World War II.
Rate It!
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Sexual Content |
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ViolenceSome racially motivated brutality; firebombing; Russian roulette; a graphic assassination. |
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LanguageA few scattered curses. |
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Message |
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Social BehaviorA fair-handed portrayal of racial struggle in America, the movie encourages education and speaking out against injustice. |
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