Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Chris Jesu Lee's avatar

The contemporary equivalent of My Pafology wouldn't be a narrative that fetishizes black poverty. It would more likely to be, say, some multi-generational family saga of an upwardly mobile black woman as she navigates genderized racism at elite universities and workplaces, as well as difficulties in interracial relationships, all somehow tied to overarching Twittery BLMish themes. For American Fiction to have had genuine artistic integrity, it would've had to have gone after the Cord Jeffersons and Issa Raes, not the Sapphire stand-in. But of course Jefferson and Rae aren't going to target themselves, so they create this self-serving fantasy where they're both the winners AND underdogs.

Expand full comment
Evan Agovino's avatar

I genuinely wondered after seeing it whether the movie was a meta-commentary on what it takes to appeal in a white audience in 2024 as opposed to when the book was written. The movie is about the trials and travails of the professional class! It's the only possible explanation to me as to why the movie is so disjointed, with two plotlines that have very little to do with one another and a bizarre meta-ending that lets American Fiction be the piece of work filmed rather than Fuck.

If that's the case then it's absolutely brilliant; Jefferson pulled one over on everybody and got nearly the same level of acclaim for American Fiction in the real world that Fuck got in the film. If that's not the case then I genuinely couldn't believe how off-the-mark the parody was in the film. The Park Slope audience at Nitehawk sure seemed to lap it up though...

Expand full comment
10 more comments...

No posts