Stereotypes in Film(Continued...)
BLACK MAGIC Hallorann Dick Hallorann In a 2001 speech, Spike Lee decried the black filmic stereotype that he called the "Super-Duper Magical Negro." These African-American characters are around solely to help Caucasian protagonists with their crazy native voodoo powers. With his uneducated dialect full of ain'ts and misplaced gots, Dick Hallorann in Stephen King's The Shining is a textbook Magical Negro, helping child-hero Danny when he's trapped with his mother and father at a haunted Colorado resort. After Danny's dad, Jack (Jack Nicholson), turns psychotic, he sends a telekinetic SOS to Dick to come save them. Dick comes roaring up to the Overlook in a snowcat, but just as he's about to save Danny and his mother, Jack chucks an ax into Dick's chest. Dick's efforts, however, still gave Danny and his mother time to escape. Apparently, the Magical Negro is a stock character Stephen King can't get enough of. In the 1999 film The Green Mile, prisoner John Coffey (Michael Clark Duncan) saves the lives of several people, as well as a mouse, with his mystical blackness. Tell us, Spike, would you rather have the mouse die? |
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