This week we are screening 12 Years a Slave - one of the best films of 2013.
Here are my notes:
12
Years a Slave
Director: Steve
McQueen
Starring: Chiwetel Ejiofor,
Benedict Cumberpatch, Lupita Nyong’o, Michael Fassbender, Paul Dano and Brad
Pitt
Awards
and Nominations
- Won
three Oscars - Best Film, Best
Adapted Screenplay (John Ridley) and Best Supporting Actress (Lupita
Nyong’o), and nominated for six more, including Best Actor (Chiwetel
Ejiofor) and Best Supporting Actor (Michael Fassbender)
- Won
two BAFTAs – Best Film and Best Actor (Chiwetel Ejiofor), and nominated for
seven more including Best Director, Best Supporting Actor (Michael
Fassbender) and Best Supporting Actress (Lupita Nyong’o)
- A
further 212 wins and 193 nominations
“While it is not the
role of critics to tell people which films to see and which to avoid (audiences
make those decisions for themselves), let me begin by saying that if you have
any interest in cinema – or, for that matter, in art, economics, politics,
drama, literature or history – then you need to watch 12 Years a Slave."
Mark
Kermode
In 1841 Solomon
Northrop (Chiwetel Ejiofor), an educated black man born free in New York State,
is tricked, drugged and sold into slavery in the South. Here he initially becomes the property of the
relatively benign plantation owner Ford (Benedict Cumberpatch) but later is
sold on to the sadistic Epps (Michael Fassbender). After 12 years he is rescued and finally is
able to return to his family.
Northrop published
his memoir of his time as a slave in 1853, shortly after Harriet Beecher
Stowe’s best-selling novel about Slavery, Uncle
Tom’s Cabin, and both books provided dramatic stories for the political
debate over slavery that took place in the US in the years leading up to the Civil
War. Subsequently the book fell into
obscurity until the 1960s when two historians researched Northrop’s story, retraced
his journeys, and published a scholarly edition of the text that is still in
print.
After the success of
his film Hunger (2008) Steve McQueen
had expressed an interest in making a film about “the slave era in America”
with “a character that was not obvious in terms of their trade in slavery” but
it was not until he was given a copy of Northrop’s memoir that he found his
story:
“I
read this book, and I was totally stunned. At the same time I was pretty upset
with myself that I didn't know this book. I live in Amsterdam
where Anne Frank
is a national hero, and for me this book read like Anne Frank's diary but written 97 years
before – a firsthand account of slavery. I basically made it my passion to make this
book into a film.”
The film received
almost universal acclaim from both critics and audiences for its acting,
especially the performances of Chiwetel Ejiofor, Michael Fassbender and Lupita
Nyong’o, as well as Steve McQueen’s direction, the screenplay by John Ridley
and its faithfulness to Northrop’s original memoir.
Steve McQueen began
his career in the UK as a Turner prize winning visual artist whose work
included numerous short films. His first
feature film was Hunger (2008), starring
Michael Fassbender about the 1981 Irish Hunger Strike, and in 2011 he made Shame, once again starring Michael
Fassbender as a sex addict whose life is turned upside down when his estranged
sister reappears in his life.