Search

» » Black Panthers (1968)

Short summary

A short film of interviews and protests at a rally to free Huey Newton.

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Umge
    I hadn't seen any of Agnes Varda's films until I caught The Gleaners and I a few months ago at a film festival. I loved it, mainly because of Varda's extremely personal aproach to some interesting material and questions. I was recently doing some research on sixties activism when I stumbled across Black Panthers, Varda's 1968 documentary about the Black Panther Party.

    The 30 minute long film looks at a rally to free the party's leader, Huey P. Newton. There's no pretense of objectivity -- the Black Panther Party shared in the copyright. Speakers at the rally included Bobby Seale, Stokely Carmichael, and H. Rap Brown, and there's also a short interview with Newton, in prison. Other segments include white people at a firing rage (some of which are children), and members of the police department explaining the gear they carry in the trunks of their cars.

    This film documents some of the most important and controverial black leaders of the late 60s, and is a must see for anyone interested in sixties radicalism ot the Panthers.
  • comment
    • Author: inetserfer
    Black Panthers (original title) is listed by IMDb with the title "Huey" (1968). However, we saw it with the original title. This half-hour documentary was directed by the French filmmaker Agnès Varda.

    Varda went to a Black Panther rally in Oakland. The Panthers were demanding that the government free Huey Newton, co-founder of the Black Panther party. Newton was on trial, accused of murdering a police officer.

    Beside filming the rally itself, Varda filmed an interview with Newton himself while he was in jail, In addition, she interviewed or recorded H. Rap Brown, Stokely Carmichael, Bobby Seale, and Eldridge Cleaver.

    The Black Panthers Party was a revolutionary party, and they made no secret of the necessity to use violence to obtain their goals. They considered themselves at war with the Oakland Police Department. (Probably, the feeling was mutual.)

    This is a historically important movie, especially for those who aren't old enough to remember the events of the late 1960's. It's also a lesson in the craft of documentary filmmaking, as exemplified by Agnès Varda. I would sum it up as "speak softly, but get the footage you need."

    We saw this film at the wonderful Dryden Theatre in the George Eastman Museum in Rochester, NY. It's part of a Varda retrospective, co-sponsored by Rochester Institute of Technology and the Eastman Museum. I'm sure it will work well on the small screen.

    P.S. Newton was eventually convicted of manslaughter, but a higher court overturned the verdict. He had two more trials, both of which ended in hung juries. Ultimately, the government gave up.
  • comment
    • Author: Zymbl
    For any younger person such as myself who wasn't alive during the 60's and it's numerous radical movements, "Black Panthers" is a good historical piece of film. Vardas is definitely not objective here and is clearly rooting for the Black Panthers, but I can't really blame her when the opposition is the FBI and Oakland police.

    Behind all the dry summaries and articles about the Black Panthers is a truly revolutionary spirit of an oppressed people. This film does a wonderful job capturing that spirit during one of the more important times for the Black Panthers, which was the trial of Huey Newton. I especially appreciated the extended interview of Huey Newton himself while he was in jail, footage of the underappreciated Stokely Carmicheal who was one of the more intellectual figures, and the focus on woman in the Black Panther party.

    I wish there was more of a focus on differing parties in the movie, like the cops or white reactionaries. Not so the film could claim to be objective but because the claims of the Black Panthers (racism, fascism,etc.) could be shown as context for their rallies. In addition, there isn't much actual filmmaking shown here, just that a team was present. I would suggest the amazing "Harlan County" for a documentary that shows the spirit and soul of the movement, not just by showing up, but through filmmaking skills.

    Overall it's a good visualizer of an interesting and important part of radical history in the U.S.
  • comment
    • Author: Defolosk
    "Black Panthers" or "Huey" or "Black Panthers - Black is Honest and Beautiful..." (what a cringeworthy title, could have come directly from Claudia Roth) is a Belgian half-hour documentary short film from 1968, so this one has its 50th anniversary this year. It is an early, but not very early effort as writer and director for Belgian-born filmmaker Agnès Varda and she was around the age of 40 when she made it. This year (2018) she turns 90 and depending on when you read this review, it may have happened already (hopefully). This film is from the height of racial tensions involving not just the murder of Martin Luther King but also the arrest of Huey Newton and the police efforts against the Black Panther movement. I think that in theory it was a good movement because back then racism really was a huge problem unlike today, but it is impossible to support or cheer for the protesters if we hear comments like that they won't rest until every Black man in jail is released. Yeah right, who cares about convicted drug dealers, murderers, rapists etc. Just let them all out, won't we. A prime example of how long positive discrimination already exists indeed. Of course, there are good, informative and politically relevant moments too from the melting pot that the cities of America were at this point, but the lows are way lower than the highs are high. So yes, this is not one of Varda's best moments sadly and could/should have been way better than it actually turned out. I give it a thumbs-down. Not recommended.
  • comment
    • Author: GYBYXOH
    I've been deeply impressed by earlier work by Varda; when this happens with me the filmmaker's whole journey becomes a lifelong project. I have several of these running, open-ended affairs with creative, alert souls who I know I can always turn to for a far- reaching view.

    This is a small snapshot, but no less part of the journey. It's among a few political films she did at the same time as Godard and others, with Vietnam booming in the distance.

    It's a look at a rally party of the Black Panthers at the time of Huey Newton's trial for the murder of a policeman, but there's nothing more they can offer Varda's camera than sloganeering and Varda had no more time to devote into it, perhaps not the inclination to probe more and inquire. Possibly she was interested in no more than this glimpse in passing.

    It says something that she was there of course, yet she also makes it a point to ask some of the rapt faces if they know Huey didn't do it; they don't, but they're fervent just the same, it's all part of a war being waged on them, Huey is a prisoner of that war, he must go free, or else.

    There's a much more sobering history prior to and as we move away from that day, based on what little I know; the obsession with territory and tribal law, and on the other hand police abuse and a youthful life without prospects that would turn Southcentral LA into Beirut, but you have to remind yourself that this is all simmering behind the ideology and parades, the image barely able to contain a life that would soon spill from it.

    Politics are thin, but maybe it is all here anyway for you to deepen? Politics aside, the glimpse is worthwhile. It's a day in that life, that place, that furor about injustice.
  • Credited cast:
    H. Rap Brown H. Rap Brown - Himself
    Stokely Carmichael Stokely Carmichael - Himself
    Eldridge Cleaver Eldridge Cleaver - Himself
    Ron Dellums Ron Dellums
    James Forman James Forman
    Huey P. Newton Huey P. Newton - Himself
    Bobby Seale Bobby Seale - Himself
    All rights reserved © 2017-2024 hd.thomson-multimedia.com