Stanley Kalu
was still a senior in college when The Obituary of Tunde Johnson,
his feature film debut, premiered. The film itself was a stand out at the
Toronto International Film Festival that year, in 2019, as it dealt with police
brutality, as well as the intersectional experience of being both Black and
queer. It centered on Tunde, a Nigerian-American teen in Southern California
dealing with coming out to his parents, a boyfriend he's been keeping a secret,
and drugs. But the project is on a loop of sorts as Tunde finds himself living,
and then reliving his own death at the hands of police time and time
again.
Now,
Kalu's project is readying for a widespread release as Out premieres
the film's trailer.
Having been
awarded Next Wave at TIFF, and won the Audience Award at Outfest, The
Obituary of Tunde Johnson stars 13 Reasons Why's Steven
Silver as Tunde, Nicola Peltz as his longtime friend Marley, and Spencer
Neville as Soren O'Connor, the closeted boyfriend. The project will release in
theaters where available and be available digitally on February 26th. It puts
on screen the sort of looping coverage Black communities go through regularly,
watching unarmed Black folks die at the hands of police on the news or social
media time after time. The sickly evergreen nature of the film can be
emphasized by the fact that the film won The Launch Million Dollar Competition
in 2018 — there it picked up not only a budge of at least $1 million but a
director in Emmy Award-winning Ali LeRoi, and Kalu got an agent and manager
representation; — it premiered at TIFF in 2019; and it is being made available
widely this month, less than a year after the Black Lives Matter movement was
reignited after a rash of killings.
“I wanted to
piece together these experiences of violence that I've seen … to show what life
is like against death and what it feels like to be devalued and to constantly
die every day, which I think is the experience of [people of color] in
America,” Kalu told Out in 2019 of the project. “Maybe people would stop being
such assholes.”
And while
Americans may view the project mostly from that experience, as Kalu was born in
Nigeria, there is also a distinctly queer version to see it
through as well.
“I had all
these feelings and kept seeing people that look like me die every day in
America,” he said. “And then back home, it's not like here. Queer people die in
the same way.”
The Obituary
of Tunde Johnson will be released in theatres and on
demand by Wolfe Releasing on February 26th.
SOURCE: OUT DOT COM
No comments:
Post a Comment