March 29, 2017 Page 15 A Film to Seep into your Consciousness C ontinued From p age 4 ly to the music, which includes a disturbingly buoyant 1930s hunt- ing song (“Run Rabbit Run”) and whose introduction to Chris’s world is accompanied by Childish Gambino’s admonition to “stay woke” in the song “Redbone.” A haunting original song by Michael Abels (who created the excellent and creepy soundtrack) opens and closes the film, entreating a “brother” in Swahili to listen to the elders, listen to the truth, run far away, and save himself. A few other things to notice: Watch Chris manage, sub- merge, deny, and apologize for his fears and misgivings, especially to Rose. In most cases, those very moments contain clues of what’s to come, yet the impulse to ad- dress his experience turns to ash in Chris’s mouth. Chris’s behavior felt very familiar to me; far from a foolish horror-movie protagonist, Chris is simply doing what people who are othered typically do be- cause of the high cost of naming or even recognizing the truth of their experience. Perhaps if we were to right-size our expectations, “stay- ing woke” would mean recogniz- ing that for a marginalized person to minimize his observations of his own experiences in this way is to act like a foolish horror-movie protagonist. Watch also for Rod’s struggles to advocate for Chris. A scene where he attempts to enlist help from three police officers of color is especially painful. Notice how the black woman cop uses her own adoption of a “uniform” to dispute Rod’s diagnosis of what is hap- pening. The film contains several ex- amples of trade in black bodies. This is a particularly resonant part of black experience, yet we are not at all alert to it in this culture. Michelle Alexander has explained how state-sponsored oppression of black people has morphed from slavery to Jim Crow to mass in- carceration; this film suggests that we ought to be alert to a similarly resilient practice of trade in black bodies. Hypnosis figures prominent- ly in the film as a means of con- trolling black people’s response to oppression. This struck me as pro- foundly resonant. In what ways do we instruct and train black people to, in a sense, marginalize them- selves? Finally, the film contains the idea of a “sunken place” from which a black person retains a limited ability to see what is hap- pening to him or her but cannot respond. I have been stewing on how that metaphor manifests in real life, how it is that black people and other people of color can lose the ability to see their own oppression and to act to in- terrupt it. At times it feels like they have allowed themselves to be enlisted by white supremacy; I have also often experienced a kind of silencing that I did not at all sign up for. Whatever your social location, reflecting on the means that are used to silence black people and other margin- alized folks has the potential to be an important part of your own awakening. Peele has accomplished some- thing that is worthy of your most focused attention. See the film for fun -- but don’t stop there. Allow it to seep into your consciousness and to trouble you. Recognize that when black folks exit the theater, they walk back out into a world where they face real danger -- even and in some ways especially -- at the hands of well-meaning white peo- ple. Listen to the elders; listen for the truth. Darleen Ortega is a judge on the Oregon Court of Appeals and the first woman of color to serve in that capacity. Her movie review column Opinionated Judge ap- pears regularly in The Portland Observer. Find her movie blog at opinionatedjudge.blogspot.com. It Does Good Things TM This page is sponsored by Oregon Lottery C ALENDAR March 2017 SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY 19 20 21 22 23 Swallows Return to San Juan Capistrano 26 Make up Your own Holiday Day Poet Robert Frost born, 1874 1st Day of Spring Louis Sachar born, 1954 27 Alaska hit by 8.4 Earthquake (1964) FRIDAY 24 Children’s Poetry Day National Teen-Agers Day Single Parents’ Day National Goof Off Day National Sing-Out Day United Nations World Water Day Toast Day Political Leader Patrick Henry declared, “Give me liberty...”, 1775 Harry Houdini born, 1874 Exxon Valdez runs aground (1989) 28 29 30 31 “Greatest Show on Earth” formed 1881 Doreen Cronin Birthday R Coca-Cola was Invented in 1886 Armed Forces left Vietnam (1973) Doctor’s Day Artist Vincent van Gogh born, 1853 Tater Day Mathematician Rene Descartes born, 1596 SATURDAY 25 Pancakes First Made (1882) Sculptor Gutzon Borglum born, 1871