"I've always been around and involved in
politics and believe that we all have to participate one way or
another. But no, I'm not going to get into it," Clooney told
Reuters.
"I don't have to answer to any one person. I don't have to make
compromises, I can point the finger at whomever I think needs to
be pointed out," he added.
In his latest film "Suburbicon," Clooney directs a darkly
humorous 1950s crime tale in which he points the finger squarely
at the racial tensions in present-day America with a story about
a black family moving into an affluent white suburban
neighborhood as the backdrop.
"I think we should constantly be talking about whether or not
building walls and scapegoating of minorities is how we want to
be represented," Clooney said.
"I think the best way to do that is to remind ourselves that
this is something that we do, that we've been doing probably
since the beginning of our country and that we have to
constantly litigate it," he added.
"Suburbicon," out in U.S. theaters on Friday, follows Gardner
Lodge (Matt Damon) in the aftermath of a terrifying break-in at
his suburban home, which results in the suspicious death of his
wife.
As the investigation into the tragedy deepens, Gardner and his
wife's twin sister Maggie (Julianne Moore) find themselves in a
situation quickly escalating beyond their control.
"This was probably the darkest role I've ever had a chance to
play, which is very liberating," Damon said.
Clooney said that while there are "people much better qualified
to tell the story of African-Americans in mid-20th century
suburbia," he wanted to use the story of the Mayers family -
based on a real black family that moved into the all-white
suburb of Levittown, Pennsylvania in 1957 - to shine a light on
the absurdity of racism.
In numerous scenes, the white inhabitants of the town say that
while they do not want African-Americans to be oppressed, they
do not want black families in their neighborhood.
"The pinnacle of white privilege is my character driving around
the neighborhood on a bicycle covered in blood murdering people
and nobody's looking at him because they're all focused on the
Mayers family and blaming them for all their problems," Damon
said.
(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy, editing by G Crosse)
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