My Top Ten Black History Movies:
Black History Month is not only a time of remembrance — it is a time of reckoning. It asks us to revisit the past with clarity, to interrogate the narratives we’ve inherited, and to examine
Black History Month is not only a time of remembrance — it is a time of reckoning. It asks us to revisit the past with clarity, to interrogate the narratives we’ve inherited, and to examine
Director Rob Reiner on Ghosts of Mississippi, a film based around the events of the murder of black civil rights activist Medgar Evers; Myrlie Evers-William and Bobby DeLaughter, whose stories are portrayed in the film;
In 1996, Ghosts of Mississippi framed the long-delayed prosecution of white supremacist Byron De La Beckwith (played by James Woods) for the 1963 assassination of civil rights leader Medgar Evers as a courtroom drama centered on a white prosecutor: Bobby
When Hollywood revisits the civil rights era, it often frames the courtroom as a battleground of conscience — a space where eloquent summations and moral clarity can pierce the armor of bigotry. But the historical
In the early hours of June 12, 1963, a single rifle shot tore through the humid air of Jackson, Mississippi — and through the fragile promise of American democracy. Medgar Evers, the NAACP’s first field secretary
In honor of Black History Month, this month’s featured film turns its attention to one of the most painful — and most instructive — chapters of the American civil rights movement. Ghosts of Mississippi revisits the long-delayed pursuit