Detroit tells a story of racial injustice and police brutality, based on fact, which is easy enough to believe and has parallels with today’s problems with police criminality and impunity. But since this important subject is not new, what is the point of the film? What are we learning that is unique? What actionable knowledge are we getting from a tragic, racist event that happened 50 years ago?
1967 Detroit. The raid of a black after-hours club, the arrest of its patrons by police and general frustration with discrimination sets off days of riots and looting. One night, Larry Reed (Algee Smith, The New Edition Story) lead singer of the teen soul group The Dramatics is slated to do a debut performance in a Motown review at a theater that attracts blacks and whites. Cops close the venue down, due to the imminent danger on the streets outside.
Larry and his buddy Fred Simple (Jacob Latimore, The Maze Runner) seek refuge at an $11-a-night motel called the Algiers. There they meet two white girls (Hannah Murray, Kaitlyn Dever) and wind up talking to them in Larry’s room. Shots ring out from an Algiers’ motel window, which is near a National Guard prep area. The Detroit Police, Michigan State Police and Michigan Army National Guard swarm the hotel, which is now under siege. They are led by local white patrolman Phillip Krauss (Will Poulter, The Revenant), who has just been reamed out by his commanding officer for shooting an unarmed looter in the back.
Krauss instigates an intimidation process, lines up some of the black male hotel guests and the two white females against a wall in a hall and harasses them. Verbal and physical abuse ensues. Krauss institutes a “death game:” The cops take a victim into a room, close the door, fire a shot and pretend to kill him. This ruse is designed to instill fear into the others and scare them into ratting on the guy who fired the shot from the window. Before the night is out, the police murder three black males.
A security guard Melvin Dismukes (John Boyega, Star Wars: The Force Awakens) witnesses the event. Sometimes he’s a part of the problem, and sometimes he helps the victims with supportive words: “Don’t antagonize the guys. I need you to survive the night.” An Air Force veteran named Greene (Anthony Mackie, The Hurt Locker) is one of the hostages. And Army troops warrant officer Roberts (Austin Hébert) is part of the posse. When the sun comes up and the bloodshed is over, the cops are arrested, a lame trial is held, and no one serves any jail time for the misconduct or homicides.
In this shallowly conceived film, written by Mark Boal (The Hurt Locker, Zero Dark Thirty), blacks are not bright enough to fight the law or status quo (minus fleeting appearances by Congressman John Conyers, played by Laz Alonso), and whites are generally one-dimensionally evil or complacent. Any viewer looking for more than a retread of anguishing racial injustice will be sorely disappointed. There is nothing of value here except an epoch of history and a little-known tragedy that corroborates that black people have been the victims of violence and police brutality for decades, and specifically in the explosive 1960s.
Director Kathryn Bigelow is an expert with action scenes and quick edits. That was her strong suit with The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty. She choreographs crowd scenes and deployments quite well. She builds tension, dread and suspense. With this film, her glaring flaw is the interrogation scenes, which seem brutally sadistic, way too long and almost ghoulish versus authentic.
Newly shot scenes are edited in with archival footage from the 1960s, thanks to editors William Goldenberg (Heat) and Harry Yoon. The visuals, by cinematographer Barry Ackroyd (The Hurt Locker) are not in question. Other technical aspects of the film are on solid ground.
The ensemble acting is universally tepid. That might be because so much attention was paid to the technical aspects and not the creating or recreating of characters that are three-dimensional. When the dust settles, the only performance that resonates is that of Will Poulter as the despicable killer Krauss. He is a nightmare. If that is the persona that over-rides everything, the writer and director have not served this event, cast or the viewer well.
What moviegoers reaffirmed from Lee Daniel’s historical African American drama The Butler is that the black community has survived and thrived against great odds. From Stanley Nelson’s documentary The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution audiences found people who stood up against the machinations of local police and the vicious FBI. From Ava Du Vernay’s Selma, which chronicled Martin Luther King’s Selma March, viewers discovered that his message and life achievements trumped the most distressing parts of his short life. In Steve McQueen’s 12 Years a Slave, he picked a project that showed a free man who endured after being kidnapped into slavery.
After sitting through Detroit’s two hours and twenty-three minutes of incessant tragedy, it is hard to come up with any salvation. It’s a well-intentioned, fact-based story based on police records, news reports and the recollections of some of the participants. What the writers could not verify they embellished. (For example, the Krauss character is a composite and not based on a specific person, though Reed and Dismukes are.) If the filmmakers could create new characters and storylines because the records were skimpy, they could have created one about a lone soul who became a community activist based on his/her experience from this tragedy. They could have given their audience one ray of light. One great black hope. But there is none.
The overwhelming feeling you’ll likely have after sitting through this urban hell is despair, anger and hopelessness. The makers of 12 Years a Slave and the other aforementioned films had far more vision than the creators of Detroit. And, an ordeal without purpose is just an ordeal.
Visit NNPA News Wire Film Critic Dwight Brown at DwightBrownInk.com.