"Sollers Point"
Rating
SupportConsume If Free
Feminism
Neo-Marxism
Affirmative Action
American Honeyโ€™s McCaul Lombardi stars as Keith, a directionless Baltimore wigger and drug dealer just released from prison and attempting to find his place in the world. At stake in the formless, meandering story is whether the poorly behaved and inarticulate protagonist will settle into the family pattern of working-class tedium and community coexistence or fall back in with the white nationalist gang with which he became affiliated while incarcerated. Keith bowls from one unnecessarily unpleasant situation into another, getting into fights, making a little money, and chasing after various specimens of ghetto tail. Lombardi is an intense performer, and Jim Belushi is likable as his boring but well-meaning dad. What at first appears to be a downbeat and largely pointless character study, however, is revealed to be an accidental comedy once the filmmakerโ€™s ridiculous intentions are taken into consideration. 4 out of 5 stars โ€“ in part for the unintentional humor furnished by the director in the DVD extra features. Ideological Content Analysis indicates that Sollers Point is: Anti-drug. Diminishing marijuanaโ€™s glamor, a thug mentions that his stash had recently been stuffed up his ass. The film also offers a putrid portrait of an aging, heroin-addicted whore hawking her unappetizing wiles on a roadside. Pro-family. Keithโ€™s father does what he can to protect and provide for his wayward son, and other family members are also helpful and affectionate. Keith seems to be troubled by his absence from his nieceโ€™s life. Multiculturalist, pro-miscegenation, and anti-white. Baltimore appears in the film as a more or less functional chocolate city marred only by the presence of reckless and immature young white men and trashy white women. Keithโ€™s father, at least, seems to be a good man as evidenced by the fact that he hangs out and plays cards with blacks โ€“ so not all white people in the movie are criminals or addicted to dope. โ€œI was really interested in reflecting the diversity of this neighborhood in southeast Baltimore,โ€ soyboy writer-director Matt Porterfield explains in an interview included on the Sollers Point DVD, โ€œbut I wanted to sort of focus on the ways in which they shared space rather than the divisions, you know?โ€ The way in which Keith shares space with his black neighbors, however, seems to entail an inferior and deferential role. When Keithโ€™s wigger nationalist acquaintances roll up with hostile intentions, Keithโ€™s black thug neighbors come to his aid by throwing liquor bottles at the white gangโ€™s van; but then they expect him to pick up the broken glass littering the street โ€“ which he obediently does. Keith, Porterfield says, has to โ€œfigure out who his people areโ€, and as Porterfield concludes, โ€œhis people in the film are white and blackโ€ โ€“ which may go a long way toward explaining why the character is so lost. Interestingly, the writer-director describes his movie as โ€œa portrayal of a white male in society trying to find his place,โ€ adding that Keith is โ€œnot being given any traditional rites of passage.โ€ I burst out laughing, however, when he added that the protagonist is โ€œrepresentative of, you know, a large portion of the population that put our current president in office. Itโ€™s tapping into a cultural energy that we all kind of want to understand, that put Trump in office.โ€ Which, of course, is 2016 in a nutshell. The Dems should never have underestimated Trumpโ€™s appeal to the wigger jungle fever ex-con MAGA drug dealer demographic!
Feb 18th 2019
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