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El Supremo

(20,377 posts)
Fri Mar 5, 2021, 06:20 PM Mar 2021

In a new series, TCM takes a look at 'problematic' classics

Loving classic films can be a fraught pastime. Just consider the cultural firestorm over “Gone With the Wind” this past summer. No one knows this better than the film lovers at Turner Classic Movies who daily are confronted with the complicated reality that many of old Hollywood’s most celebrated films are also often a kitchen sink of stereotypes. This summer, amid the Black Lives Matter protests, the channel’s programmers and hosts decided to do something about it.

The result is a new series, “ Reframed Classics,” which promises wide-ranging discussions about 18 culturally significant films from the 1920s through the 1960s that also have problematic aspects, from “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” and Mickey Rooney’s performance as Mr. Yunioshi to Fred Astaire’s blackface routine in “Swing Time.” It kicks off Thursday at 8 p.m. ET with none other than “Gone With the Wind.”

(snip)

TCM hosts Ben Mankiewicz, Dave Karger, Alicia Malone and Eddie Muller will also be part of many conversations. The films that they’ve selected aren’t under the radar novelties either. As Stewart said, “they’re the classics of the classics.”

The series, which runs every Thursday through March 25, will also show “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner,” “Gunga Din,” “The Searchers,” “My Fair Lady,” “Stagecoach,” “Woman of the Year” and “The Children’s Hour.”

all at: https://apnews.com/article/tcm-reframed-classics-ccac676ad469ca3932a0890b0dd4e67a

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In a new series, TCM takes a look at 'problematic' classics (Original Post) El Supremo Mar 2021 OP
This is one of those times Staph Mar 2021 #1
I don't know. I can't imagine that anybody would be swayed by the norms portrayed catbyte Mar 2021 #2

catbyte

(35,794 posts)
2. I don't know. I can't imagine that anybody would be swayed by the norms portrayed
Fri Mar 5, 2021, 06:33 PM
Mar 2021

in most of these films. I would've thought that "Adam's Rib" would ve viewed as being more "problematic" than "Woman of the Year." "Stagecoach" (both versions) has always been a problem for me. Who likes to see their ancestors portrayed as evil heathen savage, brutish murderers attacking the noble, innocent white invaders, er, settlers? But "Guess Who's Coming to Dinner"?!? That was radical in 1969 and a lot of these need to be appreciated for the times they were in.

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