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  2. Black directors: Their defining films and impact on the industry

    www.aol.com/news/black-directors-defining-films...

    Like F. Gary Gray, Spike Lee is a long-reigning king of Black cinema. Lee might be one of the most famous names on this list of Black filmmakers. His work has defined the last few decades of Black ...

  3. African American cinema - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_American_cinema

    African Americans. African American cinema is loosely classified as films made by, for, or about Black Americans. [1] Historically, African American films have been made with African-American casts and marketed to African-American audiences. [1] The production team and director were sometimes also African American. [2]

  4. 35. Life (1999). Cast: Eddie Murphy, Martin Lawrence, Ned Beatty, R. Lee Ermey Directed by: Ted Demme Two New Yorkers, Ray Gibson and Claude Banks, travel to Mississippi on a bootlegging mission ...

  5. Celebration of Cinema and Television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Celebration_of_Cinema_and...

    The Celebration of Cinema and Television is an awards ceremony presented annually by the American–Canadian Critics Choice Association (CCA). The first ceremony was named Celebration of Black Cinema and Television to honor the finest in cinematic and television achievement by African Americans directors, producers, actors and musicians.

  6. The Woman King - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Woman_King

    Box office. $97.6 million [3][4] The Woman King is a 2022 American historical action-adventure film about the Agojie, the all-female warrior unit that protected the West African kingdom of Dahomey during the 17th to 19th centuries. Set in the 1820s, the film stars Viola Davis as a general who trains the next generation of warriors to fight ...

  7. Hallelujah (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallelujah_(film)

    Hallelujah is a 1929 American pre-Code Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer musical directed by King Vidor, and starring Daniel L. Haynes and Nina Mae McKinney.. Filmed in Tennessee and Arkansas and chronicling the troubled quest of a sharecropper, Zeke Johnson (Haynes), and his relationship with the seductive Chick (McKinney), Hallelujah was one of the first films with an all-African American cast produced by ...

  8. Magical Negro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magical_Negro

    In the cinema of the United States, the Magical Negro is a supporting stock character who comes to the aid of white protagonists in a film. [1] Magical Negro characters, often possessing special insight or mystical powers, have long been a tradition in American fiction. [2] The old-fashioned word "Negro" is used to imply that a "magical black ...

  9. African-American representation in Hollywood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African-American...

    The perspectives, or perhaps lack thereof, throughout Hollywood of black representation can be linked back to colonialism and post-colonial perspectives within cinema. [ citation needed ] Colonialism and slave culture imposed an awareness of privilege and ascendency to “lesser breeds without the law”, [ 14 ] to the point that a stigmatism ...