Close Menu
The Baylor Lariat
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
    Trending
    • 32nd annual Beall Poetry Festival to host poets, creative writing competition
    • Professor, students create musical in honor of Declaration of Independence
    • Waco hairstylist highlights clients’ creative side with unique, colorful designs
    • Underdog Baylor men’s basketball still controls own destiny
    • Baylor men’s tennis topples No. 1 Ohio State, marking first home win over top team since 2011
    • Sports Take: 2026 World Baseball Classic pool predictions
    • Bear Trail to replace gravel path with wider concrete sidewalk
    • What to Do in Waco: March 6-12
    • About us
      • Spring 2026 Staff Page
      • Copyright Information
    • Contact
      • Contact Information
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Subscribe to The Morning Buzz
      • Department of Student Media
    • Employment
    • PDF Archives
    • RSS Feeds
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
    The Baylor LariatThe Baylor Lariat
    Subscribe to the Morning Buzz
    Friday, March 6
    • News
      • State and National News
        • State
        • National
      • Politics
        • 2025 Inauguration Page
        • Election Page
      • Homecoming 2025
      • Baylor News
      • Waco Updates
      • Campus and Waco Crime
    • Arts & Life
      • Wedding Edition 2025
      • What to Do in Waco
      • Campus Culture
      • Indy and Belle
      • Leisure and Travel
        • Leisure
        • Travel
          • Baylor in Ireland
      • Student Spotlight
      • Local Scene
        • Small Businesses
        • Social Media
      • Arts and Entertainment
        • Art
        • Fashion
        • Food
        • Literature
        • Music
        • Film and Television
    • Opinion
      • Editorials
      • Points of View
      • Lariat Letters
    • Sports
      • March Madness 2025
      • Football
      • Basketball
        • Men’s Basketball
        • Women’s Basketball
      • Soccer
      • Baseball
      • Softball
      • Volleyball
      • Equestrian
      • Cross Country and Track & Field
      • Acrobatics & Tumbling
      • Tennis
      • Golf
      • Pro Sports
      • Sports Takes
      • Club Sports
    • Lariat TV News
    • Multimedia
      • Video Features
      • Podcasts
        • Don’t Feed the Bears
        • Bear Newscessities
      • Slideshows
    • Sing 2026
    • Lariat 125
    • Advertising
    The Baylor Lariat
    Home»Opinion

    Viewpoint: ‘12 Years a Slave’ more than masterpiece film

    webmasterBy webmasterOctober 23, 2013 Opinion No Comments4 Mins Read
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    By Leonard Pitts Jr.

    The film surprises you with vast silences.

    It is an emptiness that at first seems jarring to sensibilities trained to believe every moment must be crammed. By contrast, this movie takes you into moments of pregnant stillness: no movement on the screen, no dialogue, no swelling music to cue your emotions. At one point, the camera takes what feels like a minute to study Solomon Northup’s face as he absorbs the awfulness of his predicament. He does nothing. He simply is.

    It is silence as respite, silence that gives you room to contemplate and feel. You end up grateful for it, even though most of what you contemplate and feel is painful and sad.

    “12 Years a Slave” is based on Northup’s 1853 memoir of the same name. In the movie, actor Chiwetel Ejiofor is Northup, a free black man from upstate New York who, in 1841, is kidnapped and sold. The film has received glowing reviews, all of them deserved. But it is more than a masterpiece. It is also the most unsentimental depiction of American slavery ever filmed.

    And it could not arrive at a more propitious time. America practiced the buying and selling of human beings for 246 years — from before it was a country until after that country was torn apart and forced back together over the question of whether the practice would continue. The enslavement of Africans and the murder and forced removal of American Indians are the worst things America ever did to Americans. Nothing else even comes close.

    The latter, we don’t talk about. The former, we talk around. We make it a cartoon, two-bit fantasy like “Django Unchained.” We make it a political talking point, as in the esteemed black doctor who deemed the Affordable Care Act “the worst thing that has happened in this nation since slavery…” One struggles to imagine the Jewish response if anyone, let alone a Jew, compared health-care reform to the Holocaust.

    We do not revere. We do not respect. At some fundamental level, we do not even understand. Or want to.

    So it falls to Ejiofor and director Steve McQueen, two Britons, to tell us this most American of stories. Their movie is not an easy one. Often, its vast silences are filled with soft weeping from its audience. The violence is physical. And emotional.

    There is a scene where a woman is beaten, the whip cutting skin down to the white meat of her, blood spraying with every blow.

    There is a scene where two men are hanged, legs pawing uselessly at empty air until finally, life grants them the mercy of death.

    There is a scene where the camera pans up from Northup, screaming for help down in a slave dungeon, to show, in the distance, the Capitol building of the United States. The juxtaposition is eloquent in its wordlessness.

    Some will likely cite the hardness of the movie as a reason not to see it. But unless one understands the crime this film describes — and that means to comprehend in depth, not to skate through the superficial outlines — one cannot truly understand America, either then or now.

    Alex Haley revealed that the original title of the book that became “Roots” was “Before This Anger.” Haley’s research spanned the 1960s, a time when African-American communities were exploding in riot and rage. The working title was meant to alert readers that these things had context and antecedent.

    “12 Years a Slave” can be said to serve the same purpose in an era where African-American communities no longer explode, but simmer with poverty, crime, absence, injustice and neglect. In its searing power the movie commands those lost virtues of reverence and respect. In its haunted silences, it testifies to what America was and is, still.
    The film is not just brilliant. It’s necessary.

    Leonard Pitts Jr., winner of the 2004 Pulitzer Prize for commentary, is a columnist for the Miami Herald, 3511 N.W. 91 Avenue, Doral, Fla. 33172. Readers may write to him via email at lpitts@miamiherald.com.

    webmaster

    Keep Reading

    The slow death of the American Dream

    It’s OK to be your childhood self

    We don’t need a diagnosis for every feeling

    Your camera roll is boring — try film instead

    A village takes villagers

    Gaming toxicity has gotten out of hand

    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Recent Posts
    • 32nd annual Beall Poetry Festival to host poets, creative writing competition March 5, 2026
    • Professor, students create musical in honor of Declaration of Independence March 5, 2026
    About

    The award-winning student newspaper of Baylor University since 1900.

    Articles, photos, and other works by staff of The Baylor Lariat are Copyright © Baylor® University. All rights reserved.

    Subscribe to the Morning Buzz

    Get the latest Lariat News by just Clicking Subscribe!

    Follow the Live Coverage
    Tweets by @bulariat

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
    • Featured
    • News
    • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Arts and Life
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.