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I'm curious how accurate it will be to history. Unlike that smut from Tarantino, with this I do have some expectations of historical accuracy since it's supposed to be a true story.It seems most film depictions of the era have a gross misunderstanding of the social world at the time, how racism was expressed, and the frequency of different types of slave treatment. They also utterly forgo slave retaliation scenarios, how common it was for slaves to work for other people in off hours for money [...]
Certainly just the idea that a human could be owned by another is shocking in this day and age.
My gf and I were talking about this after seeing the film: it's not shocking at all because it is still rampant worldwide. Human trafficking is big, big business. A Saudi princess was just busted here in SoCal for slave labor.
This does occur in the movie. It's hard to say precisely how "accurate" it is. It's based on the book written by Solomon himself, chronicling his own story. Were things exaggerated to "sell" better among the guilty abolitionists of the north? It's impossible for me to say, this far removed from the time. Certainly just the idea that a human could be owned by another is shocking in this day and age, and historically there was rampant cruelty. Hell, the simple act of owning a fellow human and forcing him to work for your enrichment at the expense of his/her own is unspeakable barbaric and cruel. I think that's the interesting viewpoint of the film; it's as if you or I were thrust into that situation. If you were the child of slave, born into slavery, you may hate it but you'd have little other frame of reference to judge the experience. The protagonist, however, lived his life as a free man. He worked his own job, had a wife and children, and a life of the sort you or I would have had at the time. Until he was kidnapped and sold to slavers. Imagine that happening to you! To go from having a life and rights to being beaten for even insisting on having a name, or killed for being able to read.
I probably phrased it poorly. There was a lot of white guilt over slavery, and many northerners despised the practice. Historians have discussed how the original book was used as a tool by abolitionists to more widely publicize the evils of slavery. While I'm not calling the book propaganda I don't know whether it was a straight factual retelling of his experiences or a weapon against the institution of slavery. Hopefully it was both.BTW, I really like Fassbender and Cumberbatch in the film, but I was occasionally distracted by the intermittent southern accents of both. Accents are hard admittedly, and to my ear neither one was entirely successful. I guess it's like that buddy that you think does a great English accent but an actual English person hears him and thinks it's awful. Off the top of my head the only English actors to sound completely American to my ear are Christian Bale, DD Lewis and the guy that played Doctor House (forget his name).
But I think that any American circa 2013 can agree that there's nothing benevolent about abduction people from their homeland and shipping them overseas to work as property for another.
Right now I'd say it's a 2-horse race for best pic AND best actor between '12 yrs...' and 'Capt. Phillips' come awards time.