PAGE 20 • GO! MAGAZINE Thursday, February 4, 2021 • The buLLeTIN MOVIES & SHOWTIMES bendbulletin.com/gowatch Kick off Black History Month with biopics, documentaries about prominent Black figures BY MAKENZIE WHITTLE • The Bulletin T hroughout the month of February, the listicles in the GO! Watch section will be filled with films written or directed by or heavily feature Black actors in lead roles. While some have probably already appeared in lists, and no doubt a few will make their way on to others, these stories should be looked at throughout the year and not just for one month. Warner Bros. photos Denzel Washington stars in “Malcolm X” (1992). BELOW: Chadwick Boseman in a scene from “42” (2013). This is a cinema section that many white audiences have neglected to immerse them- selves in either for lack of enthusiasm or simply lack of awareness. This reporter is no different, and it is something that I am consciously reme- dying to the point where it will no longer be a con- scious effort. These are beautiful, important stories that deserve a wider audience recog- nition and luckily Hol- lywood is on a course to promote more films like these into more awareness. This week’s list will focus on biopics and documentaries on real figures in Black history. ”42” (2013) — Chadwick Boseman could have appeared on this list three times be- cause in his short career he played three greats in Black history including James Brown (“Get On Up”) and Thurgood Mar- shall (“Marshall). In “42” he takes the role of color line breaker Jackie Robinson as he is recruited for the Brooklyn Dodgers by man- ager Branch Rickey (Harrison Ford). The film itself is sentimental and hits all those notes that biopics about Black people usually do but it’s Boseman’s per- formance that knocks it out of the park. Rent it on Am- azon Prime, Google Play, iTunes, Vudu and You- Tube. ”Hidden Figures” (2016) — While the film does have at least one scene of white sav- iorism (which never actually happened), the remainder of the film centers around the three Black women NASA mathe- maticians during the early years of the U.S. space program. The three leads — Taraji P. Henson, Octavia Spencer and Janelle Monae — capture the emotions of these three women beautifully. The over- all film, while not entirely groundbreaking, still resonates by bringing attention to these Continued on next page