NEW YORK, NY.- Elvis Mitchell has spent much of his life thinking, writing and talking about movies, but the release of his own debut film is taking some time to sink in.
I made this thing, and there are people in that room watching it right now, he said, a little awestruck, during a screening last month of the documentary Is That Black Enough for You?!?, which Mitchell directed, wrote and executive produced. I dont know how to think about that. This still feels so close to me.
The movie a personal account of a pivotal era of Black film in the late 60s and 70s is a long time coming. Weaving together more than 100 clips of indelible classics (Night of the Living Dead, Lady Sings the Blues) and unheralded gems (Uptight, Abar), its based on decades of Mitchells observations as a cinephile, scholar and critic, including for The New York Times (he left in 2004) and Los Angeles public radio station KCRW. Originally conceived as a book, the film streaming on Netflix unfurls as part kaleidoscopic visual odyssey, part ruminative personal essay, illuminating a fruitful period of Black cinematic expression that extended far beyond Blaxploitation.
Over dinner in Greenwich Village, where Is That Black Enough for You?!? was screening at the IFC Center, Mitchell discussed his long and somewhat inadvertent journey to feature filmmaking; why 1968 changed everything for Black people in films; and what meetings are like with David Fincher, one of the films executive producers. These are edited excerpts from the conversation.
Q: Youve been behind the camera before, as a producer and host of the documentary series The Black List and Elvis Goes There, but this is your first time directing. How did it feel?
A: It felt strangely comfortable. I remember asking Steven Soderbergh [an executive producer of Is That Black Enough for You?!?] what its like the first day of shooting, and he said, Well, if you get a good nights sleep the night before, youre OK. Its a much more demanding job physically than you think, so you want to be well rested. So I made sure I got some good sleep. But it was a strange baptism. We shot a lot of it during COVID with lots of safety precautions and after a long delay and about the only person that it didnt seem unusual to was me.
Q: How did Soderbergh and Fincher get involved?
A: Soderbergh is somebody I know a little bit because Ive interviewed him over the years. I did a Q&A with him at an event at the [Los Angeles County Museum of Art] for The Knick, and we got to talking at a dinner afterward. He said to me, What exactly is it you want to do with your career anyway? And I said, Well, thats very sweet that you think I have a career. But I told him Id had this idea for a book that Id been trying to do for a while but couldnt sell. It had been turned down twice. Steve McQueen had told me that he thought it should be a documentary, and I mentioned that to Soderbergh. I expected him to say, Thats nice. What should we order for dinner? But he offered to finance it. So we pitched it around a couple of places, and then he called up David Fincher, who had a relationship with Netflix. I go to the meeting at Netflix, and I ask David, So, how do we pitch this? What do you think? And he says Oh, were not going to pitch. Were just going to go in there and tell them what were going to do. And thats what we did. He operates a little bit differently than I do.
Q: How did you go about translating what you had thought of as a book into a film? Did you have visuals in mind?
A: I had done an outline and a sample chapter, which didnt really lend itself to a movie. What I realized was that if I used clips, I didnt have to spend so much time describing things. I could just let the clip play, and your eye will go where it wants to go. That was really liberating. The question became: What do I want to show people? Whats been missing from the conversation about great movies? Billy Dee Williams in Lady Sings the Blues to me the epitome of glamour in movies. Gordon Parks The Learning Tree, that incredible sequence of Black people riding horses silhouetted by the sunrise. It was about trying to isolate these moments that would help put the story across.
Q: The movie roughly covers the 10 years between 1968 and 1978. Why was that where you put your focus?
A: 68 was the year of Night of the Living Dead, which was an incidentally but incredibly political movie. [Directed by George Romero, its Black protagonist faces off against white zombies and armed vigilantes.] This was the year that Martin Luther King was killed, when you had all of the demonstrations and political activity. At the same time, there seemed to be this awakening of the potential of Black involvement in the movies. Then, in 1978, everything comes crashing down with The Wiz [the $24 million musical adaptation of The Wizard of Oz, starring Diana Ross and Michael Jackson, that bombed at the box office].
When movies from this period are usually discussed, we hear about Blaxploitation as if thats the sole definition of movies that came out at the time. But thats reductive and just not true. 1972 was a huge Oscar year for Black talent, starting with Isaac Hayes winning for [best song for] Shaft, but also the acting nominations for Cicely Tyson and Diana Ross and Paul Winfield, and the screenplay nominations for Suzanne de Passe and Lonne Elder III. [Tyson, Winfield and Elder were nominated for Sounder; Ross and de Passe for Lady Sings the Blues.]
Q: The movie includes interviews with people like Samuel L. Jackson, Harry Belafonte and Whoopi Goldberg. You filmed them in an empty movie theater, which gives the interviews an evocative, almost nostalgic feeling and breaks up the clips. How did you settle on that idea?
A: I wanted them to be in a theater because the movie in a lot of ways is about a kind of religion, the religion of movies. Theaters are the churches of that religion, so I felt like we should capture them in full. Lets show the whole theater the rafters, the light flickering from the projection, all of those visual cues. I didnt want it to just be an exhausting pile-on of clips. We get that at the Oscars every year, which provided an object lesson in what not to do.
Q: You were an adolescent in the 70s. What are your memories as a moviegoer?
A: It was a sweet time. I remember my dad taking me to see Cotton Comes to Harlem and just hearing that music and the bass coming through the speakers. For me and lots of people I knew, it was thrilling because it felt like a time of more possibilities for Black people; it wasnt only Sidney Poitier anymore. It didnt last; later there was the Eddie Murphy Syndrome, where the Black person had to save the movie by himself, or they would be the first to die, like Sam Jackson in Goodfellas or Glynn Turman in Gremlins. As soon as you saw them, youd go, OK. Lets start the clock. In the 70s, there was a sense of relief. It was this lessening of the burden of representation.
Q: What do you want to do next?
A: I dont know. Ive been chipping away at this forever, just trying to get it done, and I still cant believe that its actually happening. In a way, I dont really care what happens next; Im old enough now that its not like my career is riding on it. People have said that you feel depressed when its all over, but right now, Im just elated. As surreal as the Black experience in movies has been, it feels even more surreal that I got to make this thing about it.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.