Rosewood

Reviewed by: CalGal

February 7, 2000

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A conversation with Spudboy and Cellar had me renting Rosewood, the John Singleton work about the Florida town whose white community razed its more prosperous black community to the ground back in the early 20s. I'd glanced at it when it came out on cable, but hadn't watched it with any attention.

This sort of movie, was more appropriately made thirty or forty years ago. But timing and opportunity weren't in alignment for portrayals of outrages against the black community--we've had to wait a long time for these tales to be told. As a result, Rosewood seems somewhat outdated--the black victims are all incredibly noble, the whites at best conflicted and at worst the epitome of evil.

Still, it's not a bad story, certainly worth telling, and Singleton introduces some nice twists. The hero (Ving Rhames) is a black war veteran and outsider who doesn't take any shit from anyone, a switch from the gentle preacher sorts who usually people these sorts of movies with lessons of tolerance and restraint. Don Cheadle adds to his great supporting turns playing the rich black man in town who is willing to fight for his property.

I'm very tired of the de rigeur Good White Folks Help Out aspect of these movies--heaven knows, you can't have us whites feeling too bad about ourselves. But the two major white roles (Jon Voigt and Michael Rooker) are written as men who are terrified and cowardly, aware of the horror but too afraid to risk themselves to stop it. In the end, I find their final acts more noteworthy than the usually tedious Noble White Man who fearlessly fights against the mob violence without regard for his own safety or property. I thought the movie did a nice job in demonstrating how easy it is for good intentions to be overwhelmed by legitimate fear and self-interest.

Worth a look. Don't expect to take any lessons from it or feel particularly good about anything when it's over.

 

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