Template for Creating New Headers - Must Add Banman Zone
Click logo for homepage of IMDiversity.com - where careers, opportunities and communities connect
home | search jobs | my accountemployer profiles | career center | about us | for employers
Key Sponsors

 

Featured Jobs

View Featured Jobs

$100K-PLUS Jobs
 

African-American Village Categories
Arts, Culture & Media
Business, Finance & Economics
Careers, Workplace, Employment
Civil, Human & Equal Rights
Education & Academia
Family, Lifestyles, Traditions
History & Heritage
Opinion and Letters
Politics & Law
World Affairs

African-American Village News
Sniper Execution-Letter - DC sniper calls himself 'this innocent black man'
Story told of contradictory Civil War general
Story told of contradictory Civil War general
villages/african/ AP Headlines Update Page
Specials

Graduate/Professional School Opportunities
 

Alliances
Meet more IMDiversity Employment Opportunity Network allies
 

American Violet

Dramatization Revisits Infamous Case of Racial Profiling and Malicious Prosecution in Texas   

On November 2, 2000, drug enforcement agents executed a sweep of the Black community in the tiny town of Hearne, Texas, arresting 27 African-American residents, including a grieving father who was taken into custody during the funeral of his young daughter. The bench warrants had been issued by the county on the word of an informant who claimed to have purchased crack from each of the accused, despite the fact that the ex-con was the sole eyewitness, had a history of mental illness, and was himself facing criminal charges at the time.

Nonetheless, The District Attorney aggressively pursued convictions in all of the cases, generally succeeding since most of the defendants couldn’t afford to make bail, let alone hire a lawyer. What generally transpired was that after languishing in jail for several months while awaiting trial, many succumbed to the pressure of their court-appointed public defender to plead guilty to a lesser charge in return for leniency, rather than face the possibility of a lengthy prison sentence.

In actuality, these unfortunate folks from the projects had all simply been victimized by a state-sanctioned scheme to incarcerate innocent African-Americans. Ultimately, the ACLU would clear their names with the help of one of the defendants, an intrepid woman willing to risk further incurring the wrath of the local authorities by testifying against them in a lawsuit proving a color-coded pattern of malicious prosecution.

The intimate details of her lengthy ordeal, set against the backdrop of that landmark case, is the subject of American Violet, a gripping dramatization of the events surrounding the sad tragedy which ruined many a family in Hearne. Directed by Tim Disney (Blessed Art Thou), great-nephew of the legendary Walt Disney, the movie stars newcomer Nicole Beharie as Dee Roberts, a 24 year-old single-mother with four daughters whose life comes apart at the seams when she finds herself suddenly ensnared in a dragnet designed to rid the town of Black people entirely.  

We see that before being framed for a crime she didn’t commit, Dee had been getting along if not exactly flourishing, caring for her girls while trying to save enough money from waitressing to study cosmetology someday. But afterwards, she’s soon without the financial resources or the emotional support needed to handle the situation.

In matter-of-fact fashion, this brilliant bio-pic effectively illustrates the likely fallout visited upon a law-abiding but unsophisticated person like Dee up against an impersonal legal justice system unconcerned with the truth. For when she is falsely accused of distributing narcotics and held on $70,000 bail, the ripple effect of the ensuing nightmare means that she stands to lose her dignity, her job, her savings and custody of her children in fast order.                

Besides the powerful performance of Ms. Beharie, a Juilliard grad, American Violet features a smorgasbord of equally-engaging efforts on the part of a talented supporting cast topped by such veteran thespians as Alfre Woodard, Charles S. Dutton, Will Patton, Tim Blake Nelson, Xzibit and Michael O’Keefe.  A movie which earns high marks simply for being the first feature film with the guts to tackle the subject of racial profiling in such an honest fashion, especially given the similar allegations leveled at the neighboring town of Tenaha just last month.

Fair warning: Do yourself and family a favor and steer clear of that racist oasis if you happen to be Black and passing through Texas.

Rated PG-13 for profanity, ethnic slurs, violence, drug references and mature themes. 

Running time: 102 minutes
Studio: Samuel Goldwyn Films
 

Read Kam's interview with Nicole Beharie

To see a trailer for American Violet, visit:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qv8Jq09qU1Q

 To see a news report about Tenaha, Texas, see:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-I80hda3IRI

Lloyd Kam Williams

Lloyd Kam Williams is a syndicated film and book critic who writes for 100+ publications around the U.S. and Canada. He is a member of the African-American Film Critics Association, the New York Film Critics Online, the NAACP Image Awards Nominating Committee, and Rotten Tomatoes. In addition to a BA in Black Studies from Cornell, he has an MA in English from Brown, an MBA from The Wharton School, and a JD from Boston University. Kam lives in Princeton, NJ with his wife and son.

IMDiversity.com is committed to presenting diverse points of view. However, the viewpoint expressed in this article is the opinion of the author and is not necessarily the viewpoint of the owners or employees at IMD.

 

IMDiversity, Inc.
contact us
© 2009 IMDiversity Inc. All Rights Reserved.
privacy statement