After being whipped nearly to death, a slave named Peter escapes from a Louisiana plantation, outwitting cold-blooded hunters, as he makes his way North, where he joins the Union Army. The film is based on the true story of Gordon. Photographs of his bare back, heavily scourged from an overseer's whippings, were published worldwide in 1863, giving the abolitionist movement proof of the cruelty of American slavery.[1]
Come back, doubt it. Chances are this movie was made well before the slap. Covid pushed a lot of films either a year or two behind their original release date.
Jokes about this but this was almost certainly Will's thinking.
That is if he degrades himself enough with a weak slave movie where whites terrorize him and he just accepts it they'll welcome him back.
And he's actually like a lot of Black people who cry every year about not winning Emmy's, Grammy's and Oscars. They're desperate for white acceptance and validation.
From the same people who made life an unending horror show for black people for over 400 years.
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