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Saturday, December 28, 2019

Aldis Hodge on his heartbreaking role in ‘Clemency’: ‘This is something of value’

Aldis Hodge has made a major mark on Hollywood this year, starring in several stirring projects including City on a Hill, Brian Banks, and the recently released, Clemency. 

In the film that earned writer and director, Chinonye Chukwu the Grand Jury Prize Award at Sundance, Aldis Hodge plays Anthony Woods, a death row inmate who learns he has a son just days before he’s set for execution. 

The challenge that I gave myself as a performer was trying to make sure the audience could see a human being beyond a prisoner because we don’t know whether Anthony did it,” he told theGrio. 

“The point is just that doesn’t matter whether or not he did it. What matters is reflecting on the idea of our social responsibility to one another. Do we as a society have the right to take the lives of those who we believe have done something heinous? And the thing is, if we’re taking that away because we believe they are monsters, are we not monsters? Because we are justifying the idea of taking life. So it’s about the internal conversation and also about empathy. I wanted him to engage or invoke the spirit of empathy with people.”

Nigerian filmmaker Chinonye Chukwu makes history winning grand prize at Sundance for prison movie ‘Clemency’

Hodge’s character is certainly in a perilous position but manages to cling to hope despite the circumstances. “I wanted him to represent hope because as you see with many other situations in the film, every time something comes up where it might be a good thing, it gets takenfrom him. He has to fabricate hope out of thin air,” he explains. “I want people who are going through tumultuous situations to look at this and understand their value and continue to keep the faith in themselves and keep the fight going.”

He’s also hoping his work will help people ponder the problems of the prison systems in ways they haven’t before. 

“Now that we have people who see this film and come out of the theater saying, ‘OK, I didn’t know this before, but I do now. How I get active? What can I do? That’s one of the biggest influences we can have, because people come away with this with new thought, given that they are exposed to a completely new world that they didn’t understand before.”

The actor revealed how inspired and motivated he was by the film’s writer and director who shot the film in just 17 days.

“She she brought this infectious energy to set every single day. She was so excited about this film and working and going and just laughing and happy,” he says. 

“She did the real work. She actually worked in the prison in Ohio for a number of years. She volunteered for two different clemency cases. She started a screenwriting program in the prisons. She was the real deal. Not only did she bring technical skill to this, she brought experience, which was invaluable.” 

Aldis Hodge has earned the right to be selective about the roles he takes on, and explains why Clemency was more than worthy of his talents. 

“I understood it to be effective art; something that could be used as a really progressive tool. I said ‘this is something of value.’ This is something American, something I’d be proud to do because it does not attack Black culture. It points out a problem that we are as a community complicit in. Something we can all take action to correct. So I want to do things that actually move the needle.”

The post Aldis Hodge on his heartbreaking role in ‘Clemency’: ‘This is something of value’ appeared first on theGrio.



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Rob Morgan and Tim Blake Nelson discuss near-perfect performances in ‘Just Mercy’

In Just Mercy, Rob Morgan and Tim Blake Nelson offer eye-opening depictions of two very  different men. 

While the film is full of masterful performances, these two actors raised the bar in more ways than one. 

Inclusion in action: Michael B. Jordan mandated hiring diverse staff for new film Just Mercy

Nelson portrays Ralph Myers, an inmate who shaved time off of his sentence for a crime by falsely accusing Walter McMillan (Jamie Foxx) of a murder he didn’t commit. His testimony is ultimately what earned McMillan his death sentence, but Myers isn’t necessarily the racist villain we assume he is. 

“The prosecution was very lucky when they found Ralph, who was a pretty unstable guy with his own extremely difficult and damaging past…And it’s enormously tragic what they put him through to get him to testify,” offers Nelson. 

Throughout the course of the film, we come to see Myers as a victim himself, shedding light on the way that some white folks are manipulated into keeping Black men down. 

“I look at it as a journey that this character takes and a very coherent one, however surprising,” he told theGrio during our exclusive interview. 

“What the character is really meant to explore and represent in the movie is the way that poor whites are co-opted to continue the suppression of people of color and I thought that was real fascinating. It made the character very sympathetic to me as an actor.” 

Nelson is nearly unrecognizable in the role that required him to fully commit to the inner and outer scars his character carries.

WATCH: Karan Kendrick and Brie Larson discuss their unmissable film Just Mercy

Morgan plays Herbert Richardson, a death row inmate who killed someone while suffering from PTSD after serving in Vietnam. “Unfortunately, he committed a very heinous act, but might not have understood the totality of what he was doing in the condition he was in mentally at the time,” explains the actor. 

Watching Richardson grapple with his own guilt, tormented by the fact that he has blood on his hands and will die as a consequence of something he truly had no control over is heartbreaking and thought-provoking. Seeing how his fellow death row inmates, who have become his closest friends and allies offer him what little support they could is equally powerful. 

Check out the full interview with Rob Morgan and Tim Blake Nelson above. 

Just Mercy opens wide on January 10 and is in select theaters now. 

The post Rob Morgan and Tim Blake Nelson discuss near-perfect performances in ‘Just Mercy’ appeared first on theGrio.



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