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  4. What is the meaning of turning a historical fact into a film by thoroughly reproducing "Detroit"?
What is the meaning of turning a historical fact into a film by thoroughly reproducing "Detroit"?

© 2017 SHEPARD DOG, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

What is the meaning of turning a historical fact into a film by thoroughly reproducing "Detroit"?

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"Detroit" synopsis

In July 1967, on the third night of the riots, a large number of police and National Guardsmen rushed into the Algiers Motel, crowded with young black patrons, after receiving reports of gunshots. The police then begin a violent interrogation of a young man who happens to be at the motel. Eventually, it develops into an abnormal "The Game of death" and invites new tragedies...


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What is important is not to reproduce historical facts, but to raise issues that are relevant to the present day.



The movie `` Detroit '' depicts the 1967 Detroit riots and the ``Algiers Motel Incident'' that occurred during the riots. The background to the riots was the rise of the civil rights movement calling for the abolition of racial discrimination, and as a reaction to this, a sense of discrimination ran wild, leading to a white police officer who was still in his teens. The Algiers Motel incident involved the murder of three unarmed black boys.


Director Kathryn Bigelow originally specialized in edgy action films, but in recent years she has gained acclaim for her socially conscious films based on true stories. `` The Hurt Locker '' (2008), which explores the darkness within the hearts of soldiers on the front lines, won six Academy Awards including Best Picture, and Bigelow became the first woman ever to win the Best Director award.


Bigelow's previous film, ` `Zero Dark Thirty '' (2012), was also a true story based on the Bin Laden murder case, but he took this approach even further with ``Algiers Motel,'' which is the core of the movie ``Detroit.'' A reenactment scene of the incident. Three men and women who were present at the crime scene served as consultants to recreate the brutal 40-minute interrogation and torture scene as accurately as possible. Julie Heisel, a white woman who was victimized, said she was on set at all times and provided advice, and Melvin Dismukes, a former security guard who also served as a consultant, said that ``the reproduction rate is 99.5%.''



“Detroit” © 2017 SHEPARD DOG, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.


However, the racist police officer Klaus, played passionately by Will Poulter in the movie, is a fictional character based on a real person, and the trial process depicted in later scenes is not necessarily the same as reality. do not have. The police officers who were actually involved in the incident and tried were found not guilty, so it is impossible to use their real names without their permission.


To take it to the extreme, it is impossible for a movie to perfectly recreate historical facts. It is simply a drama based on a true story, depicting the social situation at the time and the emotions of the people involved. Even if it is a true story, unexpected details are often dramatized. There is a scene in the movie where the police forcefully rips off Julie's clothes, but in reality, not only Julie but her friend Karen was also stripped naked, and the police officers called her ``Nigger Lovers.'' (There are also scenes in the movie where this is teased.)


Bigelow and Ball did not create ``Detroit'' to leave a historical research record for posterity. Rather, they lament a reality that has not changed even after half a century, and through the Algiers Motel incident, they convey to us the extreme conditions of being exposed to wanton violence and discrimination. We must remember that what is important is not the accuracy of the reproduction, but rather what the creator is trying to convey through the story and characters.



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  1. CINEMORE
  2. movie
  3. Detroit
  4. What is the meaning of turning a historical fact into a film by thoroughly reproducing "Detroit"?