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Miami Herald
2 days ago
- Entertainment
- Miami Herald
Black Film Festival spotlights Black storytelling with a made-in-Miami film
Kionne McGhee is a lot of things: The son of a South Dade bean picker. A former 5000 Role Models mentee. Howard University alum. Liberty City native. An attorney and a Miami-Dade commissioner. But in his film 'The Reject,' based on his two books 'A mer[e] I Can is American' and 'Conquering Hope,' we meet a child with dyslexia and ADHD, who struggled academically and dealt with chronic absenteeism, and confronts the deaths of his father and brother. And he's not ashamed of any of it, describing his film as one that tells the story of neurodiversity and how Black children can overcome those challenges to achieve success. 'The film tells the story of how those gifts, if taken in the right light and nurtured, can be beneficial to the person that God has given those gifts to and that person then can turn around and be of benefit to the community as a whole,' he told the Herald. McGhee's story is one of several powerful narratives that highlight Black South Florida stories to emerge in the past few years. 'The Reject' is showing at the American Black Film Festival, a showcase of Black talent, networking event for indie filmmakers and a who's who of Black actors, directors and producers that takes place this week in Miami. This year's festival, now in its 29th year, features an array of panels dedicated to Black storytelling, full-length films, documentaries and shorts films. Saturday's premier event, 'Remembering Love Jones' highlights the significance of the '90s film 'Love Jones' and features a conversation with co-stars and ABFF ambassadors Nia Long and Larenz Tate. There is also ABFF Community Day on Sunday which will include a screening of 'The Reject.' While McGhee's film is the only one set in South Florida featured in this year's lineup, it is the latest in a string of films set in the Miami area that center on Black stories to be produced in the last several years. Other films include 'Mountains' by Monica Sorelle, the Regina King-directed 'One Night in Miami,' the now-canceled HBO series 'Rap Sh!t,' and of course Academy-award winning movie 'Moonlight.' Creating films that focus on Black Miami comes at a crucial moment: Efforts to suppress Black history and literature in classrooms and libraries have been at a fever pitch in Florida and nationally, even as local activists, educators and historians push back against those attempts. Tate said it's important to normalize telling Black stories with an authentic, truthful voice and in unapologetic ways. 'We have a history of other groups telling our stories, shaping up the narrative from the prism of non- Blacks and that being the standard, and it was normalized,' Tate told the Herald. 'That's what needed to change. And when we are able to tell our stories in the most truthful, honest way, the most creative way, you know, the impact is everlasting, and that's what we need.' Tate said Black people need transition from being consumers of entertainment to being producers. 'We as a group, we support entertainment, we consume it,' he said. 'So it's important for us to balance the things out by not only being consumers, but also producers, and that's why I think it's really important for us to tell our stories.' The 'Moonlight' effect Tate said ABFF plays a crucial role in ensuring the success of Black artists such as Ryan Coogler and Liberty City native Barry Jenkins, whose first film, 'Medicine for Melancholy,' debuted at the festival. 'It is a place where we all can come in, have that synergy, to network and whatever experiences that we have over that week, we take that with us.' South Florida-based filmmaker Rachelle Salnave credits South Florida and ABFF with the start of her filmmaking career, even after having her first film, 'Harlem's Mart 125: The American Dream,' rejected for a screening at the festival years ago. At the time, Salnave had just received a hefty severance package after being laid off from a job. 'I got a pass to come to ABFF, and I was like, you know what? I'm not going to let their rejection stop me. I'm going to make everybody in this festival think that my film is in that festival,' she told the Herald. 'I did and it worked.' Salnave said she took a trip to the 2010 ABFF where she connected with a film professor and pitched Robert Townsend a short. 'I raised my hand real quick, and I got up there, and I was able to pitch to him live in front of 500 people,' she recalled. Salnave said the growth in Black Miami films is in part due to the success of 'Moonlight.' University of Miami film professor Terri Francis echoed that sentiment, noting that those who worked on that set, such as director Faren Humes, have gone on to have thriving careers in film. This year her friend's daughter, Ruby Rose Collins, has a short film about her late grandmother and filmmaker Kathleen Collins called, 'all the love i could handle' screening at the festival. 'The expertise that we're seeing in current independent films in the city, and also the legibility of their films does come from the work experience, and, of course, the accolades from that film,' Francis said, who has had Jenkins speak to one of her previous classes. 'Their films are all super different. People are not making 'Moonlight' over and over.' 'It's encouraging' Apart from the success of 'Moonlight,' South Florida documentary filmmaker Cathleen Dean, noted there are grants that have helped fuel the influx of Black films set or based in Miami. Still, she noted that even with that filmmakers aren't simply waiting for the funds to trickle in before they pick up a camera. 'It's encouraging that we have a lot of young filmmakers who are ambitious, who are not sitting around waiting for grants, and they're just getting out there, and they're doing their thing, and they're utilizing these new tools of social media and inexpensive cameras to get their stories told,' she said. Al Martin, chair of the University of Miami's Cinematic Arts department, said platforms such as Tubi have also diversified where independent filmmakers can post their movies. 'We have so many platforms on which stories can be told. For all of the discursive shade that gets thrown on Tubi, the fact is, is that it is giving a number of young Black filmmakers the opportunity to have their work shown on Tubi, and that is not unimportant,' he said. For as many Black stories that come out of South Florida, Dean hopes more are told and that the kinds of stories told are diversified. 'They need to be amplified, and not just sit in Miami-Dade at art house theaters, but show that these stories are important to the nation,' she said. She noted that McGhee's story is a step in encouraging diverse Black stories out of South Florida. 'It's inspiring, and it's encouraging to other people, to other young Black boys and girls,' she said. 'They know that they can come out of the projects and end up sitting in a seat of power up in Tallahassee.- Tate echoed those sentiments, saying ABFF is in many ways necessary to celebrate success for Black filmmakers and create opportunities for budding filmmakers. 'It's really important for us to have these types of festivals and these types of spaces [and] that we can look to each other, to celebrate each other and work with each other, and not look for permission from anyone else outside of what we're doing,' he said. 'Creatives from the entire diaspora that are coming together to celebrate and recognize one another.' If you go: What: American Black Film Festival When: June 11-15 Where: Miami Beach Convention Center, O Cinema, Lyric Theatre, New World Center - Performance Hall, Cost: Screenings range from free to $16; Remaining festival passes are as low as $680; Community Day is free Info:

Miami Herald
18-03-2025
- Politics
- Miami Herald
At 5000 Role Models' police and youth conference in Miami, conversations are key
Congresswoman Frederica Wilson recalls the time she knew she had to help address the issue of policing and Black men: She was recently elected to the school board when she received a call that a Coral Gables High School principal cut short a Black history program and told students they could go back to their classrooms. Wilson remembered that the disappointed students protested, police were called and by time she got to the school, she saw Black children being hauled off in handcuffs to jail. 'I said, 'no, no, no, no, you can't do that,'' she said. It was that tension between officers and Black students added to another deadly incident involving police that made her realize something needed to be done. When word got around that she was organizing a conference to address the issue, Wilson got a call from then Coral Gables Police Chief James Butler. They joined forces to create a two-day conference at the Biltmore Hotel which has become an essential part of 5000 Role Models of Excellence Program, a leadership program for young Black men Wilson created. The event is key in strengthening communication between law enforcement officers and Black youth, Wilson told the Herald. 'They graduate with an understanding of what the job of the police entails and by the police coming to these forums, they understand the feelings, the hardships, and the tension and the fear that is in the hearts of some of these young boys,' she said. 'So that eases the tension. You have to have that conversation.' About 1,000 students from the 5,000 Role Models program packed into the Kaseya Center on Tuesday to have that conversation at the annual event, called the Police & Youth Conference. The event is hosted by the 5000 Role Models in collaboration with the Miami Heat and national nonprofit Dedication to Community, which aims to educate society on justice. At the conference, students hear from professionals in law enforcement and engage with them in breakout sessions on a variety of topics. In turn, law enforcement officers learns about what's on the minds of young Black men and come up with solutions for policing that make both parties comfortable. 5000 Role Models participant and Coral Reef Senior High student Semaj Gilliard had an idea. He said he'd like to see more community-based policing in which officers that live in his community actually police their own neighborhoods. 'Police officers will live in my neighborhood, but they'll drive over to Coral Gables or 14 blocks down, when I personally believe when people are active in their community where they know people ...it seems to mitigate risks and bring down all the negatives that happen.' Gilliard also participated in a panel with Miami Heat legends Glen Rice and Alonzo Mourning and North Miami police chief Cherise Giordani Gause to discuss the state of policing and how residents and officers can come to a better understanding of the challenges both face when interacting with each other. Gilliard said it's important for people to interact with officers when they're not in uniform. 'The more you see them without the badge the more and more you start to see them as people,' he said. 'Now instead of an officer and a person talking, it's two people coming to a solution.' Mourning said many people's view law enforcement poorly in the wake of George Floyd's killing and the decades following Rodney King's beating, both incidents were filmed and shared across media. He urged the young men to understand there is a protocol they have to follow. 'Unfortunately, because we've had so many bad visuals of officers, we already have this perception of officers that's kind of fearful,' Mourning said. 'I still, when they're behind me, I get a little tense. Am I going to get stopped?' 'I have that same fear, too,' Gause said. 'When I'm stopped and I'm not in uniform and I'm out and I get stopped, I have that same level of fear. So, I think it's valid.' Rice, who has a brother in law enforcement, said he wishes more attention was paid to positive interactions between law enforcement and citizens. 'I think the media plays a big part of the solution,' he said. But Gilliard said that sometimes all that is needed is a little familiarity, recalling when he was pulled over for an illegal U-turn. 'The first time I got pulled over, I was still afraid of the officer,' he said. 'She came up to me and said 'It's OK',' he said. 'A couple weeks later in Publix, I'm walking there and then she taps me on the shoulder and says 'do you remember me?' 'That little interaction humanized who the police are in my neighborhood much more,' Gilliard said.