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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsLandmark Loving (v. Virginia) Supreme Court Case to be made into a film
http://www.ew.com/article/2015/05/08/loving-supreme-court-case-jeff-nicholsMud director Jeff Nichols is turning to the highest court in the land for his next film, an indie drama about the ironically-named Loving v. Virginia civil-rights case, which in 1967 invalidated all bans on interracial marriage.
Australian actor Joel Edgerton (The Great Gatsby) will star as Richard Loving and British actress Ruth Negga (Marvels Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D) will play his wife, Mildred. The couple was arrested in their Virginia home in 1958 and sentenced to one year in the state penitentiary for the crime of marrying each other. He was white and she was black. The sentence was suspended so long as the Lovings moved out of Virginia, which they did in 1959, but continued to fight the Commonwealth of Virginia in the courts.
I was struck by the simplicity of the Lovings story, and I hope to make this a painfully beautiful film, said Nichols in a statement. He also wrote the screenplay, inspired by the 2011 HBO documentary, The Loving Story. Nancy Buirski, who directed the doc, is listed as a producer, along with several others, including Oscar-winning actor Colin Firth.
Nichols has a family drama with supernatural undertones called Midnight Special (starring Edgerton, Michael Shannon, and Adam Driver, among others) scheduled for release in the fall. No word yet on when Loving will be released, but youll be hearing about the case in the months to come. Loving v. Virginia has been constantly cited as a precedent in current arguments about the legal battle for same-sex marriage rights.
appalachiablue
(41,118 posts)story; learned of it through reading and PBS films. So moving and unjust what hardship, hate and legalities the beautiful couple was put through for years leading to his rather early illness. Been there.
One day perhaps there will be honest portrayals of the Hemings of Monticello. Not only TJ and Sally, but the 3 generations of concubine black women in the connected Randolph, Jefferson and Eppes families and all the relatives, white and black who lived around each other at the master's plantation, in nearby Charlottesville and later Ohio.
The British film "Belle" (2014) treated the early story of the biracial niece of prominent British Judge, Lord Mansfield who decided the infamous 18th century 'Zong' slave ship legal case that rocked the establishment in the 1780s and helped further open the door to abolition of the slave trade and slavery in the British Empire. A beautiful film.
More, Dido Belle..http://www.theguardian.com/film/2014/may/04/dido-belle-slaves-daughter-who-lived-in-georgian-elegance