Oscar Micheaux: The Superhero of Black Filmmaking (DVD)
Oscar Micheaux was the most influential African American filmmaker of the first half of the 20th century, a self-taught artist who funded, produced, and released more than 40 films, all while completely excluded from the Hollywood systems of production and distribution. Francesco Zippel’s revealing documentary (which premiered at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival) charts Micheaux’s incredible artistic journey, as he followed the urban migration to Chicago, abandoned city life to became a homesteader in South Dakota, and eventually became a resolute storyteller, writing six novels and producing dozens of feature films before his death in 1951. Regardless of the genre in which he was working, Micheaux’s provocative films served as a powerful rebuke to the ubiquitous racism of the times. In Oscar Micheaux: The Superhero of Black Filmmaking, a chorus of experts and fans—from Chuck D to Melvin van Peebles—weigh in on the incredible legacy of the man whom cinema scholar Jacqueline Stewart describes as “the most important Black filmmaker who ever lived. Period.”
- Theatrical trailer
- Interview with screenwriter/director Kevin Wilmott (BlacKkKlansman, C.S.A: The Confederate States of America)
- Original trailers of four films by Oscar Micheaux: Veiled Aristocrats (1932), Harlem After Midnight (1934), Temptation (1936), and Birthright (1939)
- Francesco Zippel - Director
- Chuck D - Himself
- John Singleton - Himself
- Kevin Wilmott - Himself
- Amma Asante - Herself
- Jacqueline Stewart - Herself
- Morgan Freeman - Himself
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