In 鈥楾ill,鈥 the power of a mother鈥檚 love
Love sometimes comes in the form of openness 鈥 even when that means revealing a brutal truth. Our commentator found that depth of love in the movie 鈥淭ill.鈥澛
Love sometimes comes in the form of openness 鈥 even when that means revealing a brutal truth. Our commentator found that depth of love in the movie 鈥淭ill.鈥澛
A single word captures the essence of 鈥渁dding insult to injury鈥 鈥 indignity. Humiliation, hatred, hurt 鈥 these three words are part of the indignity that encapsulates the brutal murder of Emmett Till.聽The legacy of Emmett鈥檚 mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, was her commitment to cut through that indignity, even if she had to employ the ugly truth and tragedy as a weapon.
I was reluctant to engage 鈥淭ill鈥 at first. I branded the movie and presentations of its ilk as the 鈥渢rauma industrial complex鈥 鈥 a painful and perhaps needless rehashing of Black trauma. A statement from 鈥淭ill鈥 director Chinonye Chukwu changed my mind:
The crux of this story is not about the traumatic, physical violence inflicted upon Emmett 鈥 which is why I refused to depict such brutality in the film 鈥 but it is about Mamie鈥檚 remarkable journey in the aftermath. She is grounded by the love for her child, for at its core, TILL is a love story. Amidst the inherent pain and heartbreak, it was critical for me to ground their affection throughout the film. The cinematic language and tone of TILL was deeply rooted in the balance between loss in the absence of love; the inconsolable grief in the absence of joy; and the embrace of Black life alongside the heart wrenching loss of a child.
鈥淭ill鈥 does a masterful job in its display of indignity, from its depiction of the Jim Crow South聽to the deliberate injustices of law enforcement, even the respectability politics present among Black people. Danielle Deadwyler鈥檚 Mamie聽is at her best when she dealt with a harsh reality 鈥 America needed to see the literal brutality of racism, leading to her decision to have an open casket at his funeral.
It is difficult to review a movie like 鈥淭ill鈥 without reviewing society altogether. Jalyn Hall, the young man who plays聽Emmett, could have just as easily starred in a movie about Tamir Rice, the Ohio 12-year-old who was killed by police. I learned about聽Emmett as a preteen, and though he might have been a peer of mine, I would not have been able to grasp the fullness of such a tragedy.聽
And聽I wasn鈥檛 yet a father when Tamir聽was killed, but I agonized over the senselessness of his death and those like it.聽
I write this now as a father聽of two sons, and Emmett鈥檚聽murder adds a more intimate burden, more gravitas, comparable to the pain I feel as a Black man.聽This quote聽from former President Barack Obama echoes solemnly: 鈥淚f I had a son, he鈥檇 look like Trayvon.鈥澛
This is where the indignity is thickest.聽For too long,聽Black people in America have engaged聽in a system that can kill your children and聽make a mockery of you, your family, and聽your聽people.
That angst can turn an innocent backdrop into a cruel ballad of perseverance. 鈥淛ust smile,鈥 reads聽a toothpaste ad as聽the camera pans away in a聽transition from precarious Chicago to the perilous Mississippi Delta.聽Grin and bear it.
The only solace is found in the community. 鈥淭ill鈥澛爅uxtaposes the horrors of racism with the shared sense of family and fears that kindred spirits face. There are the Chicagoans who rally around Mamie when they hear of Emmett鈥檚 kidnapping. There are the Black advocacy and activist organizations across the country that do their best in the face of adversity.
The point of 鈥淭ill,鈥澛爋f course, is not harm. It is history and honor, as Ms. Chukwu reminds us:
Mamie鈥檚 untold story is one of resilience and courage in the face of adversity and unspeakable devastation. For me, the opportunity to focus the film on Mamie, a multi-faceted Black woman, and peel back the layers on this particular chapter in her life, was a tall order I accepted with deep respect and responsibility. On the daily, Mamie combatted racism, sexism, and misogyny, which was exponentially heightened in the wake of Emmett鈥檚 murder. Mamie did not cower. Instead, she evolved into a warrior for justice who helped me to understand and shape my own similar journey in activism. And as a filmmaker, showing Mamie in all her complex humanity was of utmost importance.
People familiar with聽the Till tragedy might also be interested in the story of聽Medgar Evers. The Till case was one of the slain civil rights activist鈥檚聽first assignments, and the movie provides introspection between two mothers of the movement: Mamie and聽widow聽Myrlie Evers.
Till聽鈥 what a heavy surname. The word, by definition, speaks to farm labor, working tirelessly in pursuit of harvest. It speaks perfectly to Black people鈥檚 quest for justice and equity.聽The word聽鈥渢ill鈥 is also a statement of time 鈥 a period of longing, or as the end of the first verse of the聽Black national anthem聽declares:聽Let us聽march on 鈥檛il victory is won.
鈥淭ill鈥 is rated聽PG-13 for thematic content involving racism, strong disturbing images, and racial slurs.