Ava DuVernay talks new film “Origin” with Courier’s Merecedes Williams aka Movie Scene Queen

AVA DUVERNAY

When Pulitzer Prize winner Isabel Wilker­son was working on her 2020 New York Times bestseller, “Caste: The Origins of Our Dis­contents,” the author was hit with a series of traumatic events. As if exploring centuries of global caste wasn’t enough, Wilkerson had to manage strife and loss in her own back­yard. The film, “Ori­gin,” follows her life through this turbulent, yet triumphant time.

Starring Aunjan­ue Ellis-Taylor, Neicy Nash-Betts and Jon Bernthal, “Origin” writer and director Ava DuVernay gently holds our hands through a cinematic journey of history, storytelling, and devastating truths. The flight from knowing rac­ism and understanding caste keeps viewers on the edge of their seats until the very end.

This, coupled with the everyday life of a modern-day literary ge­nius, cements itself as a must-watch for both oppressors and the op­pressed.

[perfectpullquote align=”full” bordertop=”false” cite=”” link=”” color=”” class=”” size=””] ‘I made this film for people who are struggling with their place in the world.’ – Ava DuVernay [/perfectpullquote]

 

One of the film’s strengths lies in cre­ating cinematic exam­ples of some of society’s darkest shadows—slav­ery, African diaspora, the Holocaust, and the Indian caste system. “Origin,” which is now playing in theaters such as the Waterfront (Homestead) and The Manor (Squirrel Hill), is a scholarly exploration that weaves together life, lessons, and love.

Just to give you a re­fresher of exactly who Ava DuVernay is…re­member the 2014 biopic “Selma,” about the 1965 Selma to Montgomery voting rights marches, which starred David Oyelowo as Dr. King? Yep, Ava DuVernay, a Black woman, was the director. The film was nominated for Best Pic­ture at the 87th Acade­my Awards.

Before then and since then, DuVernay has been nominated or won all kinds of awards, in­cluding an Emmy Award for Outstanding Docu­mentary or Nonfiction Special (13th), and nu­merous NAACP Image and Sundance Film Fes­tival awards. But Ava DuVernay, 51, can’t be regulated to just writ­er and director. While these titles are glam­orous for any Holly­wood figure, her ability to take someone’s life, transcribe it for a mov­ie, and then travel the world to bring these sto­ries to the big screens is momentous.

I spoke with DuVer­nay, the Academy Award nominee, in advance of her new film, “Origin.” In the interview, Du­Vernay has a message for casters, talks to me exclusively about work­ing in India, and invites everyone to watch the film.

“It’s not made to con­vince, it’s an invitation to explore, and I look forward to the people who accept,” she said.

There’s much more that we discussed, and I’d like you to watch the full interview.

 

 

 

 

About Post Author

Comments

From the Web

Skip to content