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About Portland observer. (Portland, Or.) 1970-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 16, 2016)
Page 4 November 16, 2016 Billy Webb Elks Lodge #1050 presents FRIDAY NIGHT LIVE! FEATURING LOCAL DJ’S, LIVE BANDS AND OTHER ENTERTAINMENT $5. COVER CHARGE LADY’S IN FREE 9-10PM Featuring DJ Eddie Now Selling Daily Meals 12:00-Until By Chef James Billy Webb Elks Lodge #1050, 6 N Tillamook St Portland, Or 97227 503/284-4853 A Rare Film to Embrace the Black Experience c ontinued froM p Age 1 consist of running and hiding from bullies and riding the waves of his mother’s addiction. His trauma is conveyed with subtlety and speci- ficity that we rarely see. It feels so important to understand that help comes to this boy in the form of Juan, the man who controls the drug trade that has sucked in his mother. Life is complicated that way. Peo- ple are too. In his adolescence, we know the boy as Chiron. Skinny and a per- petual outcast, Chiron has acquired some +coping skills, but still is do- ing a lot of hiding. In this episode (indeed, in all three), he has pivotal encounters with a peer, Kevin. The interactions here are alternately ten- der and traumatic. We are made to feel the inadequacy of all the adults in Chiron’s world, and the walls that confine him and limit his options could not be more confining. In adulthood, Chiron becomes Black. He has bulked up and ad- opted the model of manhood set for him by Juan. Because this film has taken its time with its main characters, we are more likely to recognize that, if we encountered Black, we would not imagine that he has Little and Chiron inside him. He has chosen a persona, and the choice is both reasonable and mysterious. When Kevin asks him, “Who is you, man?” the question reverberates. Who is he? Can we know? Does he? I love that this film keeps people complex. I love that it keeps black men complex. Though it takes its time and though Little/Chiron/ Black says little -- and though I saw it when I was stressed and tired -- I was riveted. It made me want to know people in a different way. And that’s the mark of a beautiful, humanist film. Avalon Flowers 520 SW 3rd Ave., Portland, OR 97204 • 503-796-9250 A full service flower experience Cori Stewart-- Owner, Operator • Birthdays • Anniversaries • Funerals • Weddings A patient gets needed dental care during last year’s Dental Day at Clackamas Community College’s Harmony Campus in Milwaukie. Open: Mon.-Fri. 7:30am til 5:30pm Saturday 9am til 2pm. Website: avalonflowerspdx.com email: avalonflowers@msn.com We Offer Wire Services The Law Offices of Patrick John Sweeney, P.C. Patrick John Sweeney Attorney at Law 1549 SE Ladd, Portland, Oregon Portland: Hillsoboro: Facsimile: Email: (503) 244-2080 (503) 244-2081 (503) 244-2084 Sweeney@PDXLawyer.com Providing Insurance and Financial Services Home Office, Bloomington, Illinois 61710 Ernest J. Hill, Jr. Agent 4946 N. Vancouver Avenue, Portland, OR 97217 503 286 1103 Fax 503 286 1146 ernie.hill.h5mb@statefarm.com 24 Hour Good Neighbor Service R State Farm R Dental College Students Reach Out Students from the dental assis- tant program at Clackamas Com- munity College will assist dental students from Oregon Health & Science University to provide free dental cleanings, extractions and fillings to adult patients. Dental Day, sponsored by Northwest Family Services and Compassion Connect, will take place Saturday, Nov. 19 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the Clackamas Community College’s Harmony campus , 7738 S.E. Harmony Rd. Patients will be seen by ap- pointment only. Registration is in the first floor lobby of the Harmo- ny building.