Current:Home > FinanceIn ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see -Wealth Navigators Hub
In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
Rekubit View
Date:2025-04-08 05:35:30
NEW YORK (AP) — RaMell Ross sometimes sends his photography students out on a unique assignment. He tells them to photograph a white person, a Black person, an Asian person and an Indian person. “And,” he adds, “I want you to ask them how they want to be represented.”
Before Ross was a photographer, a professor, a documentarian and, most recently, a feature filmmaker,he was a point guard whose 6-foot-6-inches height allowed him to peer over defenders to see the entire court. Ross’ basketball career was derailed by injuries while at Georgetown University. But he has, ever since been fascinated with the ways we see.
In “Nickel Boys,” one of the most thrillingly innovative American films of the decade, Ross adapts Colson Whitehead’s 2019 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel. It’s about two young men — Elwood (Ethan Herisse) and Turner (Brandon Wilson) — who’ve been sent to an abusive, mid-century Florida reform school called Nickel Academy.
The story, laced with the cruelties of the Jim Crow-era South, has commonalities with films made before. But the grammar of “Nickel Boys” is entirely its own. Ross shot the film, which opens Friday in New York and expands in coming weeks, almost entirely from the point of view of Elwood and Turner. As we watch, we’re looking through their eyes. We gaze up at the sky or feel a blow to the head or feel the warmth of someone affectionately looking back at us.
“It’s an ode to looking out of the eyes of those whose eyes have been owned by others, and whose perception has been managed by others,” Ross says. “Films that take place in the past reproduce the aesthetics of the past. I question the aesthetics of the past.”
In a medium that has been called “an empathy machine,” “Nickel Boys” is a striking leap forward. In situating the viewer within the inner world of Elwood and Turner, it brings us closer to their experience, while shedding many of the conventions of both modern moviemaking and historical depictions from the time period of “Nickel Boys.”
“I know if any person in here that has wild stereotypes about the world that they acknowledge or don’t if they saw through my eyes, they would be other gone, challenged or would collapse,” said Ross in a recent interview over coffee in midtown Manhattan. “The power is in the self and the eyes.”
For Ross, who teaches visual art at Brown University, “Nickel Boys” isn’t just about finding a new way to photograph. It’s an attempt to uncover a visual language of consciousness, and specifically Black consciousness. In the time of “Nickel Boys” the dominant imagery was created overwhelmingly through a perspective that wasn’t Elwood’s, that wasn’t Turner’s.
“The question is,” says Ross, “can you repopulate the missing archive?”
Seeing first person
POV camerawork has been tried occasionally through movie history. Robert Montgomery’s 1947 Raymond Chandler adaptation “The Lady in the Lake” is generally credited as the first mainstream film shot in first person. That same year, “Dark Passage” began with a first-person prison escape, and doesn’t change perspective until the escapee (Humphry Bogart) undergoes plastic surgery.
But Ross wasn’t thinking about any precedents. Ross, who wrote the script with Joslyn Barnes complete with head turns and camera moves, wanted something much deeper than a gimmick.
RaMell Ross (Photo by Matt Licari/Invision/AP)
RaMell Ross (Photo by Matt Licari/Invision/AP)
CopyLink copied - X
In his most celebrated photography series, “South County, AL (a Hale County),”Ross examined Blackness across a Southern terrain indelibly traversed by photographers like Walker Evans. (Ross had moved to Greensboro, Alabama, to do social work and teach a college readiness program.) His images tend to be in dialogue with the photography of the past. Time, Ross says, became his medium.
“I’m definitely interested in thickening the present,” he says.
For a month before shooting, Ross and cinematographer Jomo Fray rehearsed with a small digital camera. Fray, who shot Raven Jackson’s lyrical 2023 mosaic drama “All Dirt Roads Taste of Salt,”found the process of finding new filmic vernacular enthralling.
“We have only begun to scratch the very surface of what cinema is capable of. Cinema is a medium that shares a language with our dreams,” says Fray. “We’re still at the infancy of this as an artistic form.”
Creating a ‘sentient perspective’
Ross and Fray, each of whom can be dazzlingly analytical about filmmaking and photography, found they weren’t exactly seeking POV. In reality, that would be too shaky and uncentered. Instead, they honed what they call “sentient perspective” — a POV that didn’t mimic eyes but came closer to the feeling of being within a body.
“It’s an invitation,” says Fray. “The image is an invitation for the viewer to really place themselves in a body that they may or may not recognize. For two hours, you truly are walking in the shoes of another person. And that’s at the heart of the promise of cinema.”
It wasn’t easy. Countless basic actions would need to be rethought. What would a hug look like? Production design, by Norah Mendis, essentially needed to be in all directions, 360 degrees. Operating the camera, Fray almost had to be an actor in the film, himself.
“The second that we started getting into how to make the film, I understood immediately why films like this aren’t made,” says Ross.
Yet, part of the beauty of “Nickel Boys” is how impressionistic the imagery still is. We get to know Elwood and Turner not just by what they do or what they say, but how they look upon the world, what they notice. Herisse and Wilson had the unique experience of always acting either alongside the camera rig or staring back into a lens.
CopyLink copied - X
CopyLink copied - X
“A lot of time we’d be trading places with Jomo or RaMell, but we’d stay really close and try to stay as present as possible,” says Wilson. “On the other side, when you have to look down a lens, that’s a different thing. You’re trying to not look like you’re looking at a camera, but seeing the other person on the other side of the camera.”
“The first time I watched it, there was a complete detachment,” says Herisse. “I didn’t make the connection that that was me.”
Perspectives on POV
The experience of watching “Nickel Boys” has been transcendent for many, though some critics have been more tepid about how the subjective POV alters your relationship to the characters. Some have said that connection is harder without the benefit of regular close-ups.
While Ross grants that “Nickel Boys” — a Golden Globe nomineefor best feature film, drama, and a winnerwith several major awards groups— might be challenging for those who don’t regularly engage with art or go to the theater, it’s not a criticism he has much patience for.
“I don’t give a (expletive) that you want these Black boys’ narratives to be told in a way you think makes you feel good, or make you feel connected emotionally. Can you hear yourself? Do you know how self-centered you sound?” says Ross, addressing those critics. “Do you know a way to treat the viewer not as a voyeur in the death of Black folks? I don’t know, but I think there’s an interesting way to try that doesn’t repeat the brutality in the minds of others. It gives them life. It restores something. It’s not about their death.”
Ethan Herisse, left, and Brandon Wilson in “Nickel Boys.” (Orion Pictures/Amazon/MGM via AP)
Ethan Herisse, left, and Brandon Wilson in “Nickel Boys.” (Orion Pictures/Amazon/MGM via AP)
CopyLink copied - X
Ross imagines he’ll be making more movies, but, he says, he’s in no rush. As a professor he gets to watch movies, look at photography, and talk to smart young people who have been trained in words but not in images.
And Ross is still working out his own vernacular. “Shooting” film, for example, doesn’t sound right to him. What’s better?
“I don’t know yet,” Ross says. “Engage the world. Go participate. Go make images.”
Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Australian minister says invasive examinations were part of reason Qatar Airways was refused flights
- Bruce Springsteen postpones September shows to treat peptic ulcer disease
- Everyone’s talking about the Global South. But what is it?
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Phoenix poised to break another heat record
- Texas AG Ken Paxton’s impeachment trial defense includes claims of a Republican plot to remove him
- Carrasco dismisses criticism of human rights in Saudi Arabia after transfer to Al Shabab
- Stamford Road collision sends motorcyclist flying; driver arrested
- The UK is rejoining the European Union’s science research program as post-Brexit relations thaw
Ranking
- Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
- Week 2 college football predictions: Here are our expert picks for every Top 25 game
- New Rules Help to Answer Whether Clean Energy Jobs Will Also Be Good Jobs
- Messi, Argentina to play Ecuador in 2026 World Cup qualifying: Time, how to watch online
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- EPA staff slow to report health risks from lead-tainted Benton Harbor water, report states
- 3 sailors rescued after sharks attack and partially destroy their inflatable boat off Australian coast
- Whoopi Goldberg misses season premiere of 'The View' due to COVID-19: 'Me and my mask'
Recommendation
Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
Severe flooding in Greece leaves at least 6 dead and 6 missing, villages cut off
Messi, Argentina to play Ecuador in 2026 World Cup qualifying: Time, how to watch online
Virginia lawsuit stemming from police pepper-spraying an Army officer will be settled
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
'Barbie' music producer Mark Ronson opens up about the film's 'bespoke' sound
Marina owner convicted in fatal 2008 boat crash settles new environmental protection case
‘That ‘70s Show’ actor Danny Masterson could get decades in prison at sentencing for 2 rapes