A tiny independent movie has been picked by one of Hollywood's biggest moguls to promote his latest venture. Robert L. Johnson created BET and now, the Urban Movie Channel. That's an online channel that's being called the black Netflix.
And the first original film it's acquired is a gay interracial romance set in the deep South. In Blackbird, the main character Randy, is in high school. Everyone thinks he's gay, and they're totally fine with it.
Randy, 18, is fervently religious. Even though his best friend is gay, Randy's in denial about his own sexuality.
Blackbird is a movie director Patrik-Ian Polk has wanted to make ever since he left Mississippi for college, and found himself in the gay and lesbian section of a Boston bookstore.
"And there was one book on the shelf I could tell had an illustration of a black person on the cover," he recalls. "I could see illustrated brown skin on the spine."
The book was Blackbird by Larry Duplechan.
"It had changed my life," Polk says. I'd never read anything that was told from a gay black perspective."
That perspective informs everything Polk's made for the past 20 years, including his groundbreaking basic cable series, Noah's Arc. When Polk finally adapted Blackbird, he sent the script to actor Isaiah Washington
Washington recalls: "I said, so, sorry I said have to be part of this, this is an amazing story. Coming from me, I know it's going to raise eyebrows."
Raise eyebrows because seven years ago, Washington was accused of using an anti-gay slur in an argument on the set of the show Grey's Anatomy. In Blackbird, he plays the loving father of the gay high school student.
All the drama around what Washington might have said on the Grey's Anatomy set did not concern gay director Polk.
"Two actors having a spat on set — which happens all the time — and unfortunately in this media age that we live in now, that get's blown up," Polk says. "And suddenly he's labeled, you know, homophobe, and that's all people remember."
Polk says the label sticks Washington even though other actors have used gay slurs, apologized and moved on, including Alex Baldwin, Jonah Hill.
Since the Grey's Anatomy incident, Washington's worked in lots of small independent films. He starred in the critically acclaimed but little-seen, Blue Caprice, where he played the Washington, D.C. sniper, John Muhammad.
Washington's recent films reflect his range and fearlessness, says Marcella De Veaux. She's a media relations expert who follows entertainment issues. But she was still surprised to see Isaiah Washington in a movie with lots of gay teenage sex — some of it during church.
"If I were guiding him, I would have suggest something maybe not so controversial, maybe not so provocative," she says. "I might have said, 'play it safe.'"
Blackbird is also opening in a small number of theaters across the country this weekend. De Veaux's impressed that it's the Urban Movie Channel's first original acquisition
"It's terrific, I mean, it's Bob Johnson," she says. "He takes chances. Why tiptoe out of the gate?"
As it happens this also the first movie out of the gate for actress and comedian Mo'Nique since she won an Oscar four years ago for her role in the movie Precious. Mo'Nique says she got branded as difficult, partly because she turned down every single script she was sent.
"Not only did it not touch me, it just didn't make financial sense," she says. "You know, some of the offers that I was getting, I was offered less money after I won the Oscar than before I won the Oscar."
With Blackbird, Mo'Nique is executive producing. So is Isaiah Washington. That gives them a kind of power over their narratives – both on screen and off.
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