Oh my god, this is really an incredible story, all the more so because it is true. The film has garnered a number of Academy award nominations, including Best Picture and Best Supporting Actor.
Ron Stallworth was a Black Colorado Springs police officer who successfully
infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan, going so far as to speak with David Duke
on several occasions. Stallworth’s undercover police work, aided by an
immeasurable assist from his white partner, Flip Zimmerman (so well played by Adam Driver), helped expose and quash an attack on Black activists. There you have it in a nutshell, but the telling and unfolding of the story is so well done.
Stallworth (played by Denzel Washington's son) broke the color barrier himself. As he approached the Colorado Springs Police Department
building, the camera hangs above him as he walks into frame. His job
interview serves as his first quiz and a view into his future. “We’ve never had a Black
police officer,” Stallworth is told. “So you’ll be the Jackie Robinson
of the Colorado Springs police department.” This analogy is a loaded and
telling statement that resonates across the film. The KKK is one thing, but the middle of the bell curve on race was nothing to brag about either. Really outstanding.
She is a headstrong leader played by Saoirse Ronan who was a
devout Catholic, which put her at odds with the Anglicans. Her rule was challenged by the men around her—like
those on her council, her second and third husbands and even the men
outside her castle. Yet
for all her tenacity, Mary never gains the full loyalty of her people
for various reasons. Coupled with her
disastrous marriage and several more betrayals of trust, the queen is
forced to abdicate the throne, leading her to an untimely fate.
The other aspect of the movie is Mary's claim on the English throne and the future fate of her son, a situation she discusses with Elizabeth I (played by Margot Robbie, portrayed as the
least glamorous cinematic interpretation of Elizabeth I). Robbie, however, plays the paranoid and tortured queen well,
using a tense, nervous energy against Ronan’s cool and cutting
performance. It is a film well worth seeing, and drinking in a bit of English history along the way.