All posts by mele2b@yahoo.com

Hi I'm Melvin Best, founder and director of the Harlem Film Institute. I am an educator, avid film lover and all around nice guy.

Academy Awards or (# OscarsSoWhite)

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<> on October 19, 2009 in Santa Clarita, California.

Once again its that time of the year when we all anticipate the pictures and actors who will be nominated for the Academy Awards. Hopeful Actors, Directors, and Producers breathe a sigh of relief upon hearing their film has been nominated. Unfortunately, not everyone will have the pleasure of getting the call and usually, the ones left out are our black Actors, Directors, and Producers. Straight Outta Compton, a movie about rap group NWA, starring a bunch of talented up and coming black Actors and the only ones nominated were the film, white screenwriters. Creed tells the story of the son of Rocky’s perennial foe Apollo Creed and played skillfully by Michael B. Jordan but the Actor nominated was Sylvester Stallone. The # Oscars So White has replaced the hopes of a black Actor receiving an award this year. On February 28,  the Academy Awards turns 88, winning films from Wings,  1929 to Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance), 2015, there has only been one film produced by a person of African decent, 12 Years a Slave, 2014,  to win best picture.

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Of the 305 films eligible this year, very few starred or were directed by black filmmakers. Not many films, black or white,  are able to past the Academy’s strict standards. Last year’s Oscar nominations received criticism and protest for their lack of diversity and this year is no different. Now I know not every black film or actor is deserving of the honor of being nominated but I must make a case for one man. Idris Elba’s masterful performance, as the commander of child soldiers, in Cary Fukunaga Beast of No Nation, was totally robbed. I’m not taking away anything from the 5 white actors nominated,  all fine thespians in their own right. Leonardo Dicaprio The Revenant and odds on favorite to win along with Matt Damon The Martian and Eddie Redmayne The Danish Girl, have all become regulars to the Academy’s  nomination process. The fact that Elba recently won the  Best Supporting  Actor at the SAG awards only helps to underscore #OscarsSoWhite.

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Actor Jamie Foxx arrives at the "Valentine's Day" Los Angeles Premiere at Grauman's Chinese Theatre on February 8, 2010 in Hollywood, California. "Valentine's Day" Los Angeles Premiere - Red Carpet Grauman's Chinese Theatre Hollywood, CA United States February 8, 2010 Photo by Lester Cohen/WireImage.com To license this image (59526291), contact WireImage.com

The calls for diversity can sometimes be equated with the idea of just including performances that are not up to par just for the sake of inclusion. The Academy’s strict nomination process almost make that impossible. To become a voting member of the Academy an actor must have a minimum of three theatrical feature film credits, in all of which the roles played were scripted roles, one of which was released in the past five years, and all of which are of a caliber that reflects the high standards of the Academy, and/or have been nominated for an Academy Award in one of the acting categories. With these stringent requirements, It’s not hard to see why there are so few black members.
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Many people find the exclusion of black actors from the Oscars a problem, but what I find more troubling is the black actors who have won. Hattie McDaniel Gone With the Wind, 1939, was the first black Actor to  win for her portrayal Mammy, in a supporting role. Sidney Poitier’s Homer Smith in Lilies of the Field, 1963, garnered him the honor of being the first black Actor to win in a leading role. Of the 15 Oscars awarded to black Actors, few of the characters they portrayed had redeeming qualities. Two Slaves, Lupita Nyongo  in Twelve Years a Slave, 2013 and Denzel Washington  in Glory. Two Maids, Hattie McDaniel in Gone With the Wind, 1939 and Octavia Spencer in  The Help, 2011.  A Whore and a con Woman, Hallie Berry in Monster’s Ball, 2001 and Whoopi Goldberg in  Ghost, 1990. We round it off with a Crooked cop, a Monster and a Buffoonish African leader represented by Denzel Washington in Training Day, 2001, Monique in Precious, 2009 and Forest Whitaker in The Last King of Scotland, 2006. Although nominated for Best Actor  in 1992, for his portrayal of black Nationalist leader Malcolm X  in  Malcolm X, Denzel Washington lost to Al Pacino in Scent of a Woman, easily one of Pacino’s weakest performances of his illustrious career. So it is not hard to when it comes to Hollywood and the Academy Award sometimes even when we win,  we lose.HOLLYWOOD - MARCH 07: (EDITORS NOTE: NO ONLINE, NO INTERNET, EMBARGOED FROM INTERNET AND TELEVISION USAGE UNTIL THE CONCLUSION OF THE LIVE OSCARS TELECAST) Actress Mo'Nique, winner of Best Supporting Actress award for "Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire," poses in the press room at the 82nd Annual Academy Awards held at Kodak Theatre on March 7, 2010 in Hollywood, California. (Photo by Jason Merritt/Getty Images)

 

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Spike Lee Vs. Tyler Perry

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Spike Lee and Tyler Perry are two of the most talented and successful black producer/directors, in Hollywood. Both men have accumulated a body of work that rivals many of their white counterparts. With all this talent and success, you’d think there would be peace in the valley. The argument over who will be the arbiter of the black image has once again reared its ugly head. Terms like Coonery, Buffoonery and elitism are tossed around, as the two artist fight to tell their stories. A battle that has raged in the a black community for years. Some have even compared it to the Harlem Renaissance, when Langton Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston were criticized, by Harlem Renaissance writers, for their advocacy of black folk.

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Spike Lee was recently awarded an Honorary Academy award, for his contribution to film and his body of work, that include over 40 films. Lee joins a list of directors that includes, D. W. Griffith, Orson Welles, and Cecil B. Demille.  With this honor,  he becomes the first black director to receive one. Although no one will admit it, Lee’s style of filmmaking has been copied by many of his contemporaries, with no mention of the homage. Although lacking the box office appeal, his films have earned critical acclaim, which help to solidify the moniker of a true student of film. Born to a Jazz musician father, and mother,  who was an educator, Lee’s middle-class upbringing has help to shape his black aesthetic to uplift the race. Lee’s battle with the studios is legendary, as he fought to get financing for his productions. Lee was often an outspoken critic of other entertainers when he felt the images of black folks were being demeaned or stereotyped.

 

Tyler Perrys rise through Hollywood took a different path. Raised by his abusive carpenter father and church going mom, Tyler’s upbringing was filled with sexual molestation and beatings. Tyler found success by way of the  “chitlin’ circuit”. His production of plays and musicals had made him a wealthy man  before he shot his first film. Perry’s films have been consistent box office hits. He is known for both creating and performing the Madea character, a tough elderly woman. Perry’s cast of characters, from Madea to the players on the television show “Meet the Browns”, have made him fodder for those critical of the images black people portray. Having conquered the stage and screen, he now sets his sight on television. With some new shows, “For Better or Worse” and “The Haves and the Have Nots”, Perry is looking to explore some new topic, which will no doubt expand an empire that is quickly approaching one Billion dollars.

No artist wants to be criticized for their creations nor do they want to be told what to create. I am a big opponent of censorship and see merit in both man argument. Spike Lee referred to Perry’s work as Coonery and Buffoonery, it harkens to the days of Stepin Fetchit, the black actor, who appeared in over fifty films. Lincoln Theodore Monroe Andrew Perry, aka, Stepin Fetchit came to fame in the Golden Age of Hollywood. His character earned the title “The Laziest Man in the World”. This stereotypical, lazy, illiterate and simple-minded character earned Fetchit millions but left black people with imagery we’ve yet to shake 86 years later. Tyler and Fetchit also, interestingly enough shares the surname, Perry. Spike Lee has also had critics of his film content. Lee took some heat for the portrayal, of the lead character,  in his first film “She’s Gotta Have it”, Nola Darling. Nola’s sexually liberating character was hounded by calls of misogyny and demeaning to women. Perry’s treatment of his most famous female character, Madea, has been greatly criticized on two fronts. Not only is Madea a man mocking a woman, the foul mouth, pot smoking, tough elderly woman lacks redeeming qualities.

There is one thing Hollywood knows well, and that is the power of imagery. In 1915, director D.W. Griffith film, “The Birth of a Nation”, was hailed a masterpiece. Its depiction of black people was highly offensive and demeaning. The film portrays black men, after the Reconstruction period, as savage, shiftless animals that prey on white women. The movie painted the KKK as the heroes to save white people from the black savages. One can only imagine the number of lynchings this movie encouraged. In response toThe Birth of a Nation”, brothers George Perry Johnson and Noble Johnson (a Universal Pictures contract actor), founded the Lincoln Motion Picture Company in 1916, producing middle-class melodramas likeThe Realization of a Negro’s Ambition” (1916) and “theTroopers of Troop K” (1917) and their most well-known film, “The Birth of a Race” (1918). The Johnson brothers’ movies featured black soldiers, black families and black heroes, concepts foreign to most mainstream films at that time. In the 1930s, some black film critics criticized Oscar Micheaux’s work for its portrayal of blacks, which sometimes perpetuated the same stereotypes found in mainstream films.

One could say we were once the butt of the joke but now we are creating the images now the jokes on us. It is true that black filmmakers should be able to choose to tell any story they wish to tell, like their white counterparts. The big difference lies in the fact that mainstream Hollywood produces over 300 films a year, less than 10 were produced by black filmmakers. Although not a fan of Tyler’s imagery, Lee admires his business acumen and Tyler has always championed Lee’s films. The two have expressed a desire to work on a project together and I am sure we will all benefit greatly from the fruits of this collaboration.

 

 

 

HFI’s ShoeMoney Network review

 

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I have been following internet millionaire Jeremy Schoemaker for a couple years now. I am on his newsletter and saw an email that said he was frustrated that he had sold many “how to make money online” products and even though the content was good very few people every logged in and did anything.

So he claimed not only would this be free but he would pay you for accomplishing tasks. I signed up. More because I was curious to see what his angle was than anything else. The first task was drop dead simple and I instantly received a dollar and it was sent to my Paypal instantly. and yet I never paid him anything.

Then I continued and went on the course now setting up my website. Then installing a theme, then installing plugins, etc. By the end of the 2nd level, he sends me $3. The course continued and I was glued.

Jeremy not only walks you through setting up everything,  step by step (and paying you as you accomplish the tasks), but also makes it fun awarding you belts like a karate system. But while the money was fun and kept me going, at the end I had a great blog with all the key plugins. A decked out facebook page and newsletter.

Again I never paid him $1. I kept waiting to see the trick but there truly is none.

If you seem skeptical of giving it a try it and when you make your first dollar in five minutes you will be as hooked as me. I just want to thank you, Jeremy.

Harlem Films

 

Harlem has always been a beautiful  backdrop for the movies. This historical community, constantly changing, adds to the vibrancy and spirit that is vital to Hollywood.

Harlem, as a movie location, has suffered from the skyrocketed cost of shooting on location, in New York city.  It’s a pity to see such a wonderful background lost, due to financial restraints.