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Talk:Amazing Grace (2018 film)

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Good articleAmazing Grace (2018 film) has been listed as one of the Media and drama good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
August 19, 2019Good article nomineeListed
Did You Know
A fact from this article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "Did you know?" column on May 23, 2019.
The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that a documentary film of Aretha Franklin's (pictured) Amazing Grace concert in 1972 languished in a studio vault for decades because the director did not use a clapperboard?

When criticism reaches beyond the work being discussed

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I have a question about the quote from critic Armond White: Armond White of National Review criticized the film's politics, writing: "Is playing into the approval of white people the only way that bourgeois black people can think to confirm their significance? To reduce Franklin's art to the propaganda of 'empowerment' and activism disrespects the daily significance of the civil-rights movement and its basis in the sanctified church."[45]

White's criticism as quoted is only glancingly based on the documentary. This concluding quote is based on a larger phenomenon of what he sees as undue politicization and appropriation of Franklin's career by white political figures, as typified by her funeral. Given five appreciative, though also critical, paragraphs devoted to the film itself, would not the reader be better served, and the encyclopedic nature of the article be better preserved, by a quote or quotes from the portion of his review that is actually a review? Michael (talk) 16:44, 25 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, I think they both would be. Martinevans123 (talk) 22:44, 2 January 2021 (UTC)[reply]