In
the last five to seven years there
has a been a surge of feel-good films targeted at the middle-class
black community--from ensemble dramas like The Best Man, Waiting
to Exhale, The Wood, The Brothers and Kingdom Come
to romantic comedies like Brown Sugar, How Stella Got her Groove
Back, Love and Basketball, Love Jones, and Two Can Play
That Game.
The middle-class, professional, and law-abiding African-American
characters in these films have provided a long-awaited contrast
to the overwhelming number of African-American movie characters
Hollywood has churned out that are poor, self-destructive, and/or
criminals (there's nothing wrong with being poor, of course, but
this is hardly representative of all African-Americans).
These
films were welcome by many because, for the first time, they assumed
a middle-class black audience--or at least an audience that is familiar
and comfortable with middle-class African-Americans.
Bottom
line: these films were written and directed by black folks for black
folks--and it shows.
So
what do these movies say about black lesbians and
bisexual women? Nothing good. In fact, from watching these films,
one comes away with the following messages about the black community:
1. Straight black people do not have lesbians among
their family or friends. This absence is particularly
glaring given that these films encompass such a wide variety of
black women--the uptight lawyer, the hairdresser, the obsessed athlete,
the stay-at-home mom, the office ho, the dying friend, the workaholic
stockbroker in love with a man half her age, the woman whose husband
leaves her for a white woman. But no lesbians.
Among
the black male characters, you have the ex-convict, the uptight
lawyer, the mechanic, the player, the poet, the deadbeat dad, the
cheater, and the consummate family man. You even have the black
gay man (albeit only occasionally and not usually flatteringly)--from
the black gay republican characters in Spike Lee's Get on the
Bus to Gloria's gay ex-husband and the ubiquitous gay hairdresser
in Waiting to Exhale.
There's every kind of black middle-class character in these movies
but the kitchen sink--and lesbians.
This
happens even in settings where the context almost requires their
inclusion. Love and Basketball, for example, is a movie
set in the world of women's basketball where (in real life) lesbians
not only exist, they arguably exist in disproportionate number.
But in the movie? Nary a lesbian (of any color) in sight.
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