AAFCA Roundtable: "Passing" with Rebecca Hall, Ruth Negga and Tessa Thompson.

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  • Опубликовано: 7 окт 2024
  • Passing is a 2021 black-and-white drama film written, produced, and directed by Rebecca Hall in her feature directorial debut. The film is based on the 1929 novel of the same name by Nella Larsen. The title refers to African-Americans who had skin color light enough to be perceived as "white", the practice of which is referred to as passing. The film stars Tessa Thompson, Ruth Negga, André Holland, Bill Camp, Gbenga Akinnagbe, Antoinette Crowe-Legacy, and Alexander Skarsgård.
    #Passing #Netflix #Films
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Комментарии • 7

  • @ellenoir1
    @ellenoir1 2 года назад +7

    This was one of the best interviews about the film. And considering the conversations it’s creating, it will become a cultural cinematic classic like, “Imitation of Life”. Thirty years from now we’ll still be talking about this film and all the types of passing it presents. Kudos to everyone involved making it.

  • @danagreen4543
    @danagreen4543 2 года назад +8

    What a brilliant interview! The questions were multi-layered and they gave way to such nuanced responses from the cast/director. Thank you!!!

  • @melibize963
    @melibize963 2 года назад +2

    i loved this so much. beautiful movie.

  • @fellowg73ok
    @fellowg73ok 18 дней назад

    I think I’m in love with Rebecca Hall.❤

  • @adrianayunda...scotland7713
    @adrianayunda...scotland7713 2 года назад +1

    I cannot wait to watch this film, it is so interesting!

  • @OBSJake
    @OBSJake 2 года назад

    Are all mixed black/white women androgynous lesbians? Could that have to do with race mixing

    • @fellowg73ok
      @fellowg73ok 18 дней назад

      As a mixed black/white cis-woman, the world we were born into shapes us, just like it shapes the lives of every person of every race and gender under the sun. If we experience similar things, we might turn out similar. I am not a lesbian, and am in a committed monogamous marriage with a man, but I’m not completely straight either. I find some women completely beautiful. I do feel like being mixed and visibly racially ambiguous opens up my mind in ways that are different from others and I can’t control that. I experience life a certain way. My racial identity is a blurring across lines, and a grey in a world that demands black and white. That might make me more accepting of gender expression being nuanced, just like race; so in a way, to answer your question, maybe. There is an understanding of the world around me from my specific experience, and the fact that other people can live a similar experience, breeds a similar reality. But every person is still a snowflake/fingerprint difference from person to person.