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Page 22 THE VILLADOM TIMES II • November 6, 2013
Chiwetel Ejiofor stars in brutal tale of slavery, survival
by Dennis Seuling
“Twelve Years a Slave” is the story of Solomon Northup
(Chiwetel Ejiofor), an educated black man and talented vio-
linist who lives with his wife and children in Saratoga, New
York in 1841. Two circus promoters offer him a lucrative
two-week gig in Washington, D.C., and Solomon accepts.
In Washington, Solomon is wined and dined, but the next
morning finds himself in chains and is soon stashed aboard
a steamboat bound for Georgia, to be sold as a slave.
The movie chronicles the dozen years Solomon works
on plantations, is passed from one owner to the next, wit-
nesses unspeakable inhumanities, and is subject to the
whim of his “masters.” He soon sees that a slave who can
read and write is of little value to slave owners, and so hides
his education, remaining silent, taking orders, enduring
unspeakable hardship, trying to survive day to day, always
hoping he will one day reunite with his family. Escape is
virtually impossible, for where can a slave go or hide with-
Michael Fassbender, Lupita Nyong’o, and Chiwetel Ejiofor in ‘Twelve Years a Slave.’
out money?
Like “Schindler’s List,” which has become the defini-
tive cinematic treatment of the horrors of the Holocaust,
“Twelve Years a Slave” may serve the same purpose for
the institution of slavery. Rather than making a sweep-
ing indictment, director Steve McQueen bases the film
on Northup’s own book of the same name to take view-
ers through the slave experience. In the early scenes, the
well-dressed Solomon is depicted as a respected member of
his community and devoted family man. These few scenes
are important to illustrate the sharp contrast to his role as
slave. To the white slavers and owners, he is mere property
purchased for cash as one would buy a cow or horse, and
expected to work at whatever he is told. This complete lack
of freedom is a shock to a man born free, and he quickly
learns that intelligence is more handicap than asset to one
enslaved. Ejiofor, a regular face in movies for a number of years in
supporting roles, gives a breakout performance in “Twelve
Years a Slave.” This is a tough role, demanding a range
of emotions with little or no dialogue. Much of his perfor-
mance is in reactions, particularly his eyes. Viewers can
read his thoughts, even see into Solomon’s soul as he must
face one horror after another.
The excellent supporting cast includes Michael Fass-
bender and Benedict Cumberbatch as plantation owners
of distinctly different temperaments, Paul Dano as a cruel
overseer, Sarah Paulson as a jealous plantation wife, Alfre
Woodard as a slave who has escaped the whip and made
a comfortable place for herself as mistress to her owner,
Paul Giamatti as a slave salesman, Lupita Nyong’o as the
slave girl/mistress of a plantation owner, and Brad Pitt as a
sympathetic carpenter.
(continued on Crossword page)