Dear White People

Justin Simien’s debut film plays like a Millennial version of “Do The Right Thing,” for better or worse.

Justin Simien’s “Dear White People” plays like a Millennial’s “Do The Right Thing.” It’s extremely smart but insufferably self-aware and overly ambitious, expressing an exhausting need to check every box of racial injustice and semantics in America with a talky, motor-mouthed screenplay. The film grapples with interesting ideas of identity as it ties not just to race but to gender and sexuality among young people, but it doesn’t explain why all the film’s characters have to be pretentious, intellectual, elitist snobs, an unholy mix of Spike Lee and Whit Stillman.

On an Ivy League campus, Sam White (Tessa Thompson) is a mixed-race revolutionary with a radio show entitled “Dear White People,” where she criticizes white people who only have one token black friend or will date a black guy just to piss off their parents. Sam’s loaded language sparks sharp divisions among her Black Panther-esque acolytes and a house full of cocksure, white comedy writers led by Kurt Fletcher (Kyle Gallner), the University President’s son. In a surprise twist, Sam wins a house election over the incumbent Troy Fairbanks (Brandon P Bell), son of the school’s Dean (Dennis Haysbert). Their rhetoric, politicking and class dynamics on the college campus all escalate to an offensive party and race war teased at the start of the film, a scene that echoes “Do The Right Thing’s” intense rioting.

All the film’s dialogue gets so provocative and racially charged that it’s impossible to think Simien loaded the screenplay on accident. His characters too, even Sam, who the film describes as if “Spike Lee and Oprah had a pissed off baby,” are caricatures, exaggerated in order to comment broadly on our constructions of race and identity dynamics.

Simien poses thoughtful questions. What does it mean to “keep it 100” or to be true to your blackness? Eventually “Dear White People” peels back the layers of its characters and exposes them as frauds. Sam isn’t really Malcolm X, but her ability to speak her mind and embrace a righteous attitude has allowed her to find an identity. “Are you trying to be black enough for black kids or white ones,” one character poses to “Dear White People’s” neutral observer, a nerdy and gay journalist named Lionel (Tyler James Williams). That he struggles for an answer proves how complex these characters and these issues are.

And yet that exaggerated line between satire and reality often gets crossed, with Simien’s visual style further underscoring the racial dividing lines and the film’s aggressive tone. All the white people in the film are shot to look as though they came out of a university catalog, and Simien plays with quick wiping reverse shots to show that white and black people are at the opposite sides of an invisible line. He even takes time to editorialize, with an army of black students shouting directly at the camera how Tyler Perry movies promote stereotypes.

Some of this is fun and funny, but “Dear White People” gets overstuffed with its assortment of characters, including one (Teyonah Parris) who’s superficially trying to get on a reality show and become a star, as well as a subplot about student journalists who may just be using Lionel’s blackness as a way to get an editor position with The New York Times. It’s almost insulting how much the movie name drops, with Fletcher casually tossing off names of blogs like Gawker and Buzzfeed to illustrate just how smart and connected everyone on this campus is.

“Dear White People” is entirely made up of those too cool moments. It’s self-aware and smart to a fault, overlooking a more plausible central character in Lionel in favor of the more sensational Sam and muddling the line between satire and simply inflamed rhetoric.

As a straight white guy, “Dear White People” was made to get in my face and shake up my perception. But does it have to be “on” all the time?

2 stars

Wreck-It Ralph

The plight of Wreck-It Ralph was best said by Jessica Rabbit. “I’m not bad. I’m just drawn that way.”

“Wreck-It Ralph” is a movie with a killer premise about an 8-bit arcade game villain who wants to be the good guy for once. It’s a cute film with a lot of heart that kids will gobble up, but it doesn’t represent video games in the way I would’ve hoped.

Very much like “Toy Story,” when the arcade closes, all the characters leave their in-game roles and live out lives of their own. They can even leave their own game and interact with others in a central train station hub, better known to us humans as a power strip.

Poor Ralph (John C. Reiley) has been the bad guy in his “Donkey Kong” inspired game for 30 years, and in all that time the townspeople have heaped praise on the game’s hero, Fix-It Felix (Jack McBrayer), and made him live in a garbage dump. In the film’s most clever scene, Ralph seeks help at an AA meeting for video game villains, and Bowser, Blinkie, Zangeef, Dr. Eggman and a stray zombie get him to realize that being a bad guy doesn’t mean you’re a “bad guy.”

But in an effort to win some pride, Ralph leaves his game and first joins a violent and realistic First Person Shooter and then a “Mario Kart” racer, where he helps a glitchy character named Vanellope (Sarah Silverman) win her own in-game acceptance.

“Wreck-It Ralph” is at its best when it’s riffing on games. The references function mostly as Easter Eggs for a nerdy audience brought up on Playstation, but the fun nuances are everywhere in the film’s first half hour, from a PSA featuring Sonic the Hedgehog to a race on the infamous Rainbow Road. Even the animation reflects the way certain game characters move or how background elements can be pixelated and under-developed.

For a movie that’s been given so much care, it’s a shame to see it turn into a vehicle for potty humor and lame puns about candy. The film’s big chases and action sequences feel less like actual levels in a game and more like bland movie set pieces. There’s a gag that involves Laffy Taffys and Fix-It Felix hitting himself in the face with a hammer that feels very low-brow.

And yet “Wreck-It Ralph” is sugary sweet. The characters are perky and optimistic, and Ralph is never anything but loveable. He just gets a bad rap.

I read on Twitter that this was the year that Disney made a Pixar movie and Pixar made a Disney movie (“Brave”), but “Wreck-It Ralph” is not quite “Toy Story.” It needs to level up if it wants to beat that.

3 stars