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OPINION

Leonard Pitts Jr.: 'Precious' stomps on stereotypes

Wednesday, November 25, 2009
(Updated 3:00 am)

"I wanna say I am somebody. I wanna say it on subway, TV, movie, LOUD. I see the pink faces in suits look over top of my head. I watch myself disappear in their eyes. ... I talk loud but still I don't exist."

-- Precious

Not everyone is singing hosannas.

Indeed, though it is -- maybe because it is -- among the most critically acclaimed movies of the year, "Precious: Based on the Novel 'Push' by Sapphire," has inspired a fierce backlash. Jack White on TheRoot.com (full disclosure: Jack and I worked together a few years ago at Hampton University) slammed it, unseen, as over-hyped and a waste of time. Courtland Milloy of The Washington Post called it "a film of prurient interest that has about as much redeeming social value as a porn flick." Armond White of nypress.com said it was more demeaning to black people than any film since D.W. Griffith's crudely racist "Birth of a Nation" in 1915. And hiding behind the anonymity of a YouTube message board, some individual asked: "Who let this gorilla out of her enclosure."

None of which is surprising. It might even be said that the YouTube poster and the others are simply working opposite sides of the same street. Any time art tiptoes too closely to the tripwires of racial stereotype, one can expect it to fire indignation among defenders of the African American image on the one hand and smug, racist graffiti from online half-wits on the other.

And "Precious" doesn't tiptoe, it stomps. At one point, we see the title character, a dark-skinned, morbidly obese Harlem girl, running down the street snacking from a stolen bucket of fried chicken. It's as if the storytellers challenged themselves to see how many stereotypes they could cram in. And if that were all there was to "Precious," I might think the criticism justified.

It isn't, and I don't.

"Precious" is an ode to refusing to die. She is a girl struggling to live an unlivable life, 16 years old, illiterate, sexually abused by both parents, mother of two children (one with Down syndrome) sired by her father, physically and verbally beaten down by her monster of a mother, and yet somehow she is unable to give in to the idea that she is nothing.

She is that invisible girl, the one we decline to see because she doesn't look like Halle, enunciate like Condi, inspire like Oprah, doesn't ratify our faith in the inevitability of happy endings. There are more of them than we would care to know. They are not just girls, not just poor, not just black.

They are incest victims in silent suffering, gay boys abandoned by their families, girls sold into prostitution by their mothers, 12-year-olds at home caring for 6-year-olds because nobody's seen the 35-year-old in days. They are high school graduates who cannot read their own diplomas. They are children -- our children -- failed by families and then failed again by overburdened social agencies whose job is to take up the slack, catch them before they fall.

They are children we never see until it's a police lineup. They do not appear in music videos. They are not shown in toothpaste commercials. They do not resemble the idealized, smiling, fresh-scrubbed and happy face beamed out to us on 500 channels 24/7.

No, they look like Precious, struggling to read, struggling to surmount or even survive, struggling to live the unlivable. And every once in awhile, doing it. There is a scene wherein Precious faces a mirror and sees her ideal looking back: beautiful, blonde, white. Then, in a later scene, she enters a building and there's a mirrored wall. And she looks and sees finally, only, herself.

In that juxtaposition of growth lies the soul of a remarkable film. If Jack White doesn't see it, that's fine. But one hopes the invisible children will. They'll find in it a rare reminder that they do, indeed, exist.

And that they are precious, too.

Leonard Pitts Jr.'s e-mail address is lpitts@miamiherald.com

Comments

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Panacea

November 25, 2009 - 8:41 am EST

One of my closest friends in high school was a girl like Precious. I haven't seen the movie, and I don't think I wil: precisely because of its subject matter. I saw a promo and it hit me in the stomach like a brick. A scene where the mother tries to hit Precious with a cane was too eerily like a real life scene I witnessed my friend endure in high school.

Alicia graduated high school a year late because she failed English. When she did graduate, she was barely literate and had no real skills that would get her a job. She was morbidly obese. When I convinced her to try the community college to learn a marketable skill, her mother told her she was wasting her time. Alicia dropped out a few weeks into the semester and off the map.

I think this movie would raise too many painful memories, if the trailer was any indication. There's enough truth in a movie like this, in spite of any stereotypes, to keep me away because I don't want to relive it.

There but for the grace of God go I.

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