On Monday, nearly 40 years after the original miniseries became a cultural phenomenon, a new version of author Alex Haley’s epic family drama “Roots” debuted on three networks simultaneously amid considerable hype and host of rave reviews.
The new “Roots” will not likely reach the same commercial heights as the first iteration. Only the Super Bowl stands out as required viewing for a truly broad swath of American audiences these days, and the original “Roots” series, broadcast on ABC, still ranks as the most watched miniseries in television history, with over half of Americans owning televisions at the time tuning in for its finale.
Still, even if its not aiming to surpass the original’s success, this “Roots” is by no means resting on its laurels. Sporting top-notch production values, a formidable cast and a narrative style that is both more visceral and unflinching than the 1977 version, the new series should reach a whole new audience who might find the older interpretation dated and compromised. The new “Roots” has both the blessing of the ABC edition’s stars and producers (LeVar Burton, who became an overnight star for his turn as warrior-turned-slave Kunta Kinte in the ’77 version, is an executive producer on this one) and the critics, who are lauding this new take’s verisimilitude and willingness to eschew the trappings of traditional television movie-making.
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But “Roots” version 2.0 is not without its detractors. Hip-hop star Snoop Dogg is chief among them. In a video posted on Instagram the same night “Roots” debuted, the rapper railed against the project and the proliferation of slave narratives as of late.
“I don’t understand America. They just want to keep showing the abuse that we took hundreds and hundreds of years ago. But guess what? We’re taking the same abuse,” he said in a profanity-laden rant. “Think about that part. When you all going to make a motherf—— series about the success that black folks is having. The only success we have is ‘Roots’ and ’12 Years A Slave?’”
His gripe has become an increasingly common one. Besides “12 Years a Slave,” which took home the best picture Academy Award in 2014, in the past four years there have been Quentin Tarantino’s fictional slavery-themed, revenge western “Django Unchained” and a new TV series about escaped slaves called “Underground.” This year, there will be not one, but two epics about the infamous “peculiar institution” — the Matthew McConaughey film “Free State of Jones,” which is based on Newton Knight’s armed insurrection against the Confederacy; and the Sundance Film Festival hit “The Birth of a Nation,” which reportedly recreates Nat Turner’s historic 1831 slave rebellion in vivid detail.
For black audiences especially, who have long lamented the fact that they are woefully underrepresented on the screen, these kinds of films can induce polarizing opinions — on the one hand, this is an important part of their history and cultural heritage, but on the other hand it can be viewed as relentlessly downbeat and capable of reinforcing an image of African-Americans as victims, instead of agents of their own destiny.
“I value and agree with part of what Snoop Dogg is saying,” Vassar College film professor Mia Mask told MSNBC on Tuesday. “I too want to see movies where the wonderful, triumphant aspects of our experience are reflected. I’d like to see films about the black inventors and innovators who were the backbone of the industrial revolution. But it doesn’t have to be either/or. I am not only willing to look at movies and television shows in which African-Americans are depicted without strife or without struggle.”
Meanwhile, the new “Roots” might be a reprieve for audiences weary of the tropes of what could be called the slavery genre. For those familiar with the original, either from its first airing or from required viewings as an adolescent in school, some of the classic moments are still there: a newborn Kunta being lifted to the heavens, an obstinate older Kunta — now a slave — refusing to answer to his given name “Toby.” But they are now imbued with more ferocity and arguably have a more self-reflexive cultural weight as they are coinciding with the “Black Lives Matter” movement and a national conversation about how and when violence is inflicted on black bodies.
In the original “Roots,” perhaps in an attempt to woo white audiences to settle in for the long haul, producers crafted a “morally conflicted” slave ship captain (is there any other other kind?) played by legendary character actor Ed Asner, who completes his task with a heavy heart. In the 2016 version of “Roots” there is no benevolent white character to ease the pain, and the slave ship scenes are both harrowing and unsparing in their depiction of the violence and degradation that typified the slave trade.
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