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McQueen’s ‘Small Axe’ traces history of London’s West Indian community - Title of film anthology references West African proverb popularised by Bob Marley

Published:Friday | November 20, 2020 | 12:09 AM
This image released by Amazon Prime Video shows Letitia Wright (left) as Altheia Jones-LeCointe, and Malachi Kirby as Darcus Howe in a scene from ‘Mangrove’.
This image released by Amazon Prime Video shows Letitia Wright (left) as Altheia Jones-LeCointe, and Malachi Kirby as Darcus Howe in a scene from ‘Mangrove’.

NEW YORK (AP):

For Steve McQueen, bringing back the London of his childhood began with remembering the scents of his youth.

In Small Axe, McQueen’s ambitious five-film anthology about London’s West Indian community, the 12 Years a Slave director resurrects the British capital in the decades before its multicultural present, tracing the Caribbean immigrant experience through the racism of the ‘60s, ‘70s, and ‘80s to illuminate the injustices of today. It’s a cycle, operatic in scope, with movements of resistance, oppression, protest, family and celebration. But its textures are precise and, often, personal.

The second of the five films, the rapturous Lovers Rock, captures a 1980 Blues Party – underground, improvised dance parties with thumping dub reggae held in homes since nightclubs were typically closed to non-whites. McQueen, 51, was too young for those parties. But he remembers how, during sleepovers at his grandmother’s, his uncle would leave a back door unlocked so his aunt Molly could sneak out to them.

“Through smell, so much memory came back to me. Obviously, I was of a certain age,” says McQueen. “I’d end up sleeping in a bed with coats piled on top of me when I woke up.”

The first film of Small Axe, Mangrove, begins streaming on Amazon Prime Video on Friday. (It has already started airing on the BBC in Britain.) Several of the films had been set to premiere at the Cannes Film Festival but they instead first unspooled virtually and at drive-ins during the New York Film Festival where they were received with raves. McQueen began working on the anthology 11 years ago, before the best picture-winning 12 Years a Slave, initially imagining it as a TV series.

“I didn’t know exactly what it was going to be and, to be honest, I don’t think I had the maturity or at that time the strength to look at myself or that world. It was so close to me. It was a part of me,” McQueen said in a recent interview by phone from London. “It was trying to understand who and what I am and where I come from.”

McQueen, born in West London to Grenadian and Trinidadian parents, has previously made films about Irish protest ( Hunger), sex addiction in New York ( Shame) and an all-female heist in Chicago ( Widows).

First production

But Small Axe is his first production in his native Britain. The project swelled, he says, because in looking for a story about the black experience in London, he found a multitude. The terrain, overlooked by history books and popular culture alike, was rich. The films, themselves, became a collective; the title references a West African proverb popularised by Bob Marley: “If you are the big tree/ We are the small axe/ Ready to cut you down.”

Taken together, Small Axe stitches together a little-known history, both intimate and sweeping, that had previously lingered on the margins and in family folklore. McQueen relied initially on a television-style writers’ room for brainstorming, eventually pairing off to write each film with either Courttia Newland or Alastair Siddons. Newland, an author of Jamaican and Bajan heritage, likewise pulled from memories of his own upbringing, focusing on the drastically different spaces black people are forced to navigate. Lovers Rock is set almost entirely within the house party, but a walk just down the sidewalk brings a reminder of the racist reality lurking all around. But inside, it’s joyous.

“I was born into this, but it was juxtaposed with the world outside. The world outside was not like the world inside,” says Newland, recalling a visiting white friend eyeing his family’s curry goat. “I had to learn, ‘Oh, this is not what everyone else does.’”

Amarah-Jae St Aubyn, one of several young actors who breakout in ‘Small Axe,’ drew from her own family history in playing a partygoer in Lovers Rock who sneaks out to the Blues much like McQueen’s aunt did. Her father was a reggae musician – she grew up with the music – but she needed to learn the dance moves of an earlier generation. During rehearsal, she noticed her dad’s picture on the wall. The shoot, with piped in, was then even more transportive.

McQueen completed most shooting before the pandemic arrived. While in post-production this summer, the project took on even greater resonance with the death of George Floyd and others, and the subsequent worldwide protests – including one in London attended by John Boyega, star of the third Small Axe film, Red White and Blue, a father-son tale in which Boyega plays a rookie police officer.

The five films are dedicated to Floyd.