Black Caesars and Foxy Cleopatras: A History of Blaxploitation Cinema
By (Author) Odie Henderson
Abrams
Abrams Press
11th April 2024
28th March 2024
United States
General
Non Fiction
791.430973
Hardback
304
Width 229mm, Height 152mm, Spine 28mm
225g
In 1971, two films grabbed the movie business, shook it up, and launched a genre that would help define the decade. Melvin Van Peebless Sweet Sweetbacks Baadasssss Song, an independently produced film about a male prostitute who beats up cops and gets away, and Gordon Parkss Shaft, a studio-financed film with a killer soundtrack, were huge hits, making millions of dollars. Sweetback upended cultural expectations by having its Black rebel win in the end, and Shaft saved MGM from bankruptcy. Not for the last time did Hollywood discover that Black people went to movies too. The Blaxploitation era was born.
This exuberant debut from Boston Globe film critic Henderson provides commentary on and social context for 1970s Blaxploitation films . . . a thoughtful and loving ode to the genre. * Publishers Weekly *
A lively exploration of 1970s Blaxploitation films. Henderson is clearly fond of this era of film, [and] he gives these classic films, their stars (particularly Pam Grier), and the funky soundtracks their due. An enjoyable, funny, and in-depth examination of Blaxploitation films and their influence. * Library Journal (Starred Review) *
This is a celebration of an important era in the history of film, and readers will revel in its joyful tribute to blaxploitations influential films and their creators. * Booklist *
Plenty of ink has been spilled and words have been said about the Blaxploitation era, but Black Caesars and Foxy Cleopatras is perhaps the most sweeping (and fun) exploration of the subject yet. Whether hes discussing stone-cold classics or regrettable trash, Odie Henderson tells it like it is; he approaches these films and their creators with a palpable affection for the genre, without sacrificing his keen critical and analytical sensibilities. * Aisha Harris, cohost of NPRS Pop Culture Happy Hour and author of Wannabe: Reckonings with the Pop Culture That Shapes Me *
A great book on a spectacular era of film history, by a spellbinding and hilarious storyteller. * Matt Zoller Seitz, author of The Wes Anderson Collection, Mad Men Carousel, and The Sopranos Sessions *
With his critical recording of Blaxploitation cinema, Odie Henderson champions the moment when Hollywood anointed Black stories as king. A delightful guide to the major heroes and lesser-known creatives whove influenced Black culture and cinema for decades, Henderson provides a personal, hilarious, informative, spontaneous, and brazen point of view that stands as a bible for the era. * Robert Daniels *
Henderson meets Blaxploitation where it lives, with respectful irreverenceHenderson has a palpable, unstuffy voice, and a point of view, neither of which keep him from taking his subject seriously and addressing it with authority. * Boston Globe *
Delightful Author Odie Henderson has a gift he conveys social history and economic theory and diagrams the parallel histories of Hollywood with an incisive eye and the timing of a peerless comedian working blue at the late show. * Nashville Scene *
Odie Odienator Henderson is the chief film critic of the Boston Globe and runs the blogs Big Media Vandalism and Tales of Odienary Madness. A lover of film noir, musicals, Blaxploitation, bad art, and good trash, Henderson was previously a contributing writer at RogerEbert.com from 2011 to 2022. He has written for Slant Magazines The House Next Door blog since 2006. His work has also appeared in The Village Voice, Vulture, Cineaste Magazine, MovieMezzanine, Movies Without Pity, Salon, and The Criterion Collection. He recently finished a long career in IT. He lives in northern New Jersey.