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poster
Amazon Prime Video
85
7.9
/24577/
79
/1218/
77
/501/
4.2
/62686/
99
/210/
83
/256/
95
/36/
cc age 13+

I Am Not Your Negro (2017)
Working from the text of James Baldwin’s unfinished final novel, director Raoul Peck creates a meditation on what it means to be Black in the United States.
poster
Criterion Channel
75
50
7.4
/1731/
75
/78/
71
/40/
4.1
/16782/

Meeting the Man: James Baldwin in Paris (1971)
In 1970, a British film crew set out to make a straightforward literary portrait of James Baldwin set in Paris, insisting on setting aside his political activism. Baldwin bristled at their questions, and the result is a fascinating, confrontational, often uncomfortable butting of heads between the filmmakers and their subject, in which the author visits the Bastille and other Parisian landmarks and reflects on revolution, colonialism, and what it means to be a Black expatriate in Europe.
poster
Criterion Channel
71
15
7.5
/156/
63
/3/
66
/8/
4.0
/846/

Baldwin's Nigger (1968)
James Baldwin and Dick Gregory discuss the Civil Rights Movement in 1960s Great Britain.
poster
Criterion Channel
67
13
7.2
/59/
55
/4/
65
/6/
3.8
/883/

James Baldwin: From Another Place (1973)
In Istanbul, American writer James Baldwin muses about race, the American fascination with sexuality, insights into his interrupted writing decade in the country, the generosity of the Turks, and how being in another country, in another place, forces one to re-examine well-established attitudes about modern society.
poster
?
100
/2/

James Baldwin Abroad (2023)
Showcasing three short films by American writer James Baldwin, wherein he muses about race, sexuality and civil rights, among other topics, in Istanbul, Paris and Great Britain.
poster
69
?
8.0
/75/
55
/2/
3.7
/517/

I Heard It Through the Grapevine (1982)
Renowned Black writer James Baldwin retraces his time in the South during the Civil Rights Movement, reflecting with his trademark brilliance and insight on the passage of more than two decades. From Selma and Birmingham and Atlanta; to the battleground beaches of St. Augustine, Florida, with Chinua Achebe; and back north for a visit to Newark with Amiri Baraka, Baldwin lays bare the fiction of progress in post–Civil Rights America, wondering “what happened to the children” and those 'who did not die, but whose lives were smashed on Freedom Road'.


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