"Detroit" recreates the summer civil unrest by
African-Americans in the city 50 years ago, and the little-known
police interrogation and shootings of three young black men at
the Algiers Motel.
The movie, out in major U.S. cities on Friday, has a rare 100
percent-positive review score on aggregator website Rotten
Tomatoes with many movie critics calling it timely but painful
to watch.
Bigelow, in Detroit for Tuesday's premiere, noted that although
the events took place a half century ago, unarmed black men were
still being shot by police in the United States.
"These events keep happening. I mean look at how timely and
topically it is with Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin, Laquan
McDonald, Freddie Gray," Bigelow told reporters on the red
carpet.
Brown, Martin, McDonald and Gray were killed in separate
incidents between 2012 and 2015, sparking protests and debate
over perceived racial bias among U.S. police. Martin was killed
by a neighborhood watch volunteer.
"I think (the film is) an opportunity to encourage or invite a
dialogue about bridging a divide this country desperately needs,
in my humble opinion," Bigelow added.
Bigelow, 65, was the first woman to win an Oscar for directing
with her 2008 Iraq war movie "The Hurt Locker." She also
directed "Zero Dark Thirty," the 2012 thriller about the U.S.
military mission to hunt down al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.
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In "Detroit," actor Will Poulter plays a white, racist police
officer who was subsequently tried and acquitted of all charges in
the shootings.
"I think like a lot of other white people, sometimes the topic of
race is often uncomfortable or difficult. I’m hoping that a film
like this will encourage people to talk about this topic when we’re
invited into the conversation," Poulter said.
Adam Graham, film critic for the Detroit News, wrote that the movie
is "an intense, gritty, explosive recreation of a grim moment in one
of our city’s worst chapters."
"It hurts, because it needs to. This is not a film about civic pride
or the city’s comeback. We have to own this, and Bigelow highlights
this ugly moment on its 50th anniversary. Yes, the city has moved
on, but this incident still stings, and 'Detroit' reopens wounds
that fester," Graham wrote.
(Reporting by Reuter Television; Writing by Jill Serjeant; Editing
by Matthew Lewis)
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