I penguin shuffled out of Theater No. 4 at the Angelika Film
Center Friday night, my eyes focused on no particular spot on the carpet as the
exit line moved in hushed tones. A bow-tied usher, propped up near the
concessions, peered at the faces of those who’d just seen “Fruitvale Station.”
“It looks like that
was a serious movie, “he dutifully announced.
I ignored him and kept walking, wrestling with my own
emotions and shaking my head. Almost reaching the up escalators, I stopped and
turned my face away from the crowd lining up for the next showing. My eyes
welled up and I wept.
“Fruitvale Station” is one movie you are going to hear a lot
about because it is a movie you will see and then feel a lot about.
It’s an unspoken fact of life that all humans are pre-programmed
to make snap judgments - sizing people
up, profiling each other - based on class: where you live, how you dress,
the manner of your speech, the type of work you do, the type of car you drive; gender: if you pee standing up or
sitting down; orientation; who you prefer to spend your private time with; age: how wrinkled is your skin or how gray
is your hair; and from what neighborhood, race, or religion do you come?
All people do it. Some people more than others. Others do it
and allow it to influence their behavior; some suppress it and try to give
unfamiliar individuals the opportunity to be just that: a unique individual.
In Ryan Coogler’s controversial true story about Oakland
resident Oscar Grant, we accompany him on a cinematic reenactment of the last
24 hours of Grant’s life. We make no snap judgments but complex and layered
ones; we learn he is a doting father, a son, a grandson, a nephew, a friend to
friends, strangers and animals. He also has been to prison, has sold and smoked
marijuana, and he has unresolved and gnawing angst about how to make his
family’s future more stable. He’s
struggling to not be pushed any closer to the edge.
And just like how Spike Lee portrayed Brooklyn in “Do the
Right Thing”, and how Albert Hughes portrayed South Central LA in “Menace II
Society”, Coogler grittily captures the stores, the music, the streets of East
Oakland and the omnipotent BART (Bay Area Rapid Transit) train that sleekly rumbles
across The Town, that’s what locals call Oakland, a reference to Oaktown.
Oakland is seven miles east of San Francisco (The City) via
the Bay Bridge or a quick ride through the underwater train bubble on BART. This part of Northern California is called
God’s Country because of the beautiful scenery, no humidity summers, the mountains, hills, oceans, bays, the
Redwood trees, vineyards etc. one of the most beautiful places on Earth. I feel in love with this area when I first
visited in the summer of 1989 and later lived there three different times since
college.
Many know that Oakland, it’s hills, and nearby coast towns
of Alameda, Berkeley, San Leandro , Richmond and Hayward all have better
weather and views than much of San
Francisco, which is often cold and foggy. But people stay away. They don’t
visit Oakland much because they are afraid of its reputation for gangs, gun
violence and “scary’ black people.
But I grew fond of the East Bay. I lived near Lake Merritt
in Oakland not far from the real Fruitvale Station in the racially-diverse
Fruitvale part of town. I enjoyed the ‘healthy” food, the festive people; the
fun of being in cool California; the dread of earthquakes and forest fires but
the joy of living and appreciating the environment.
Every Sunday morning (10 a.m. is kickoff time on the West
Coast) for years, I watched the NFL games at the Golden Bear sports bar with
guys just like Oscar Grant. I’ve laughed and cussed the screens and even bet against
“him and Da Raiders” when my Tampa Bay Bucs faced them in Super Bowl XXXVII. I
helped coached a Pee Wee football team of 25 black, Latin and Asian boys who
all resembled Oscar – and his environment -
when he was probably 11 or 12 years old. I cheered their successes and
helped try to mentor when their mothers got overwhelmed.
But I also was constantly aware of Oakland’s underlying gun
violence problem that seemed to crash in - sometimes randomly, sometimes not - at
any time, at any place: political
assassinations of news reporters on downtown sidewalks, corner street store
owners blasting disrespectful customers or even police officers killing
innocent unarmed people, like what the BART police did to Oscar Grant.
I was not emotional Friday night because of how the movie
“Fruitvale Station” ended; I felt it because I intimately knew the place the
film depicted and I felt I personally knew that young man. He had promise, he
had hope, his life had value.
And I know a lot more
of them; they look like my nephews Michael in Orlando, Chris and Ben in
Morristown; and my friends’ teenage boys in Dallas, D.C. and Atlanta; and the other hundreds of young men I see every
day on the streets of the Bronx, Harlem, Brooklyn and Queens.
Or like the one in a hoodie we all learned about last year who
died in Sanford, Florida: Trayvon Martin. As that murder trial jury now continues
to deliberate George Zimmerman’s fate, the comment pages and posts on social
media sites are spewing with venom: “that boy was TRASH” “Zimmerass is a punk
loser”, “Trayvon deserved it” etc. etc.
There were plenty of observers, pundits and other “keyboard
cowboys” that said all the same things in 2009 about Oscar Grant when he was
killed and about the officer that pulled the trigger. (I ask you to closely
watch the one scene of humanity and dignity between the two of them at the end
of the Fruitvale movie; once both realized the preciousness of life.)
In the Grant incident, a city’s consciousness was outraged.
One man died and one man did go to jail for 11 months. But what did we learn
from that? What has really changed about handguns, police tactics with unarmed
people, with how we value life, or how we profile each other?
I was reminded then, and now with the Martin incident, that
you can’t always judge – or be afraid of - a book by its cover. That little saying is known and said by all
of us. What’s sad though is too many people still don’t even bother to open the
book and look at any of the pages.
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