The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution (FILM REVIEW)
The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Historical Documentary Chronicles Rise and Fall of Incendiary
Political Party
The
late Stokely Carmichael is famous for coining the phrase “Black
power!” What he might not be as well remembered for is founding the
Black Panthers. Frustrated by the tortoise-paced progress of the
Civil Rights movement and by the number of martyrs dying and
disappearing around the South, he decided to leave SNCC (The Student
Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) to form a group for folks
interested in self-defense.
“You
tell the people of Mississippi that all the scared [N-words] are
dead!” he announced. However, Stokely had little to do with the
organization after opening that first chapter in 1965 in Lowndes,
Alabama (an 80% black county where no African-American had ever been
allowed to vote).
Instead,
it would be fall to Huey Newton and Bobby Seale to popularize the
Panthers. They opened a storefront in Oakland in 1966, but they
didn't really catch fire until Martin Luther King was assassinated.
At that point, many young African-Americans became disenchanted,
which made the idea of confronting the police by brandishing weapons
very appealing.
Soon,
Panther chapters began spring up all over the country. And it helped
recruitment immeasurably when ex-con-turned-best-selling author
Eldridge Cleaver came aboard as Minister of Information. After all,
the media-savvy spokesperson gave good soundbite, even if it only
served to antagonize the police and establishment.
For
instance, he called then Governor Reagan “a punk, a sissy and a
coward,” going so far as to challenge the Gipper to a duel to the
death. And after Huey was arrested for the murder of a police
officer, Eldridge threatened open armed war on the streets of the
country, if Newton weren't freed.
Meanwhile,
J. Edgar Hoover was cooking up a counterintelligence program
(COINTELPRO) designed to bring down the Panthers. The FBI proceeded
to embark on a surreptitious reign of terror which included
frame-ups, disinformation, assassinations and infiltration. The ploy
worked, as paranoia came to permeate the organization, which
splintered when the leadership became suspicious of one another. Huey
called Eldridge a coward. Eldridge then quit and called for hits
against anyone still in the Party.
Thus
unfolds The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, a
warts-and-all documentary directed by Stanley Nelson (Freedom
Riders). The film is fascinating not only because of its copious
archival footage, but on account of the many revelations exposing the
dark underbelly of an outfit often given a pass in spite of myriad
flaws in terms of misogyny and machismo.
The
Black Panthers revisited less as a political party concerned about
the welfare of the people than as an internecine power struggle
between a couple of larger than life egos.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Unrated
Running
time: 113 minutes
Distributor:
Firelight Films
To see a
trailer for The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution, visit:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F56O3kZ9qr0
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