There’s no easy way to talk about racism – it’s a nebulous set of ideas that shift and change and manifests in numerous ways that many people can’t even identify as racism because of how prevalent it is. But Dr. Ibram X. Kendi has been able to write down a fairly comprehensive narrative that outlines key historical moments that shaped the world’s concept of race and Blackness, and this narrative is brought to the screen through vivid animations and strategic sequencing by director Roger Ross Williams in new Netflix release Stamped from the Beginning. It’s a provocative, passionate investigation, and it’s one that should be required viewing.
Synopsis
Using innovative animation and expert insights, this documentary based on Ibram X. Kendi's bestseller explores the history of racist ideas in America.
Storyline
Before the transatlantic slave trade, the people of Africa weren’t seen as one race – they were from different locations in the continent, seen as part of different tribes, different cultures, different religions. This documentary brings the titular book to screen, chronicling how anti-Black racist ideas started and developed during the course of American history.
TLDR
This documentary is structured so excellently, it’s easy to understand even for people living under a rock.
What stands out
As a documentary, Stamped from the Beginning takes a fairly standard approach in depicting its subject matter – old footage, title cards, helpful graphics, interviews with experts in the field – but the way the show is structured makes the book’s ideas feel layered and comprehensible. As the book’s author Dr. Ibram X. Kendi and other interviewees talk about historical events, these narrations are intercut with footage from recent times that point out how these ideas still remain the same, even if America knows better, even when most people are already aware that these ideas only come from people trying to maintain their power.