Publishers Weekly
10/23/2023
This exuberant debut from Boston Globe film critic Henderson provides commentary on and social context for 1970s Blaxploitation films. Highlighting milestones in the genre, Henderson suggests the vibrant characters in the 1970 comedy Cotton Comes to Harlem offered alternatives to the Black stereotypes that had populated major studio films and helped to make it a box office success. Accounts of how major movies were made are peppered throughout (the idea for 1971’s Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song came to director Melvin Van Peebles as he masturbated while visiting the Mojave Desert to look for inspiration), but the focus is largely on plot summaries and critical analysis of such films as Blacula, Shaft, and Super Fly, the latter of which Henderson suggests is distinguished by its “shocking amorality.” (Rooting for the cocaine dealer protagonist “is an act of capitalistic complicity; rooting against him is siding with the corrupt system that made his hustle necessary.”) Though the detailed synopses sometimes drag, Henderson fares better when elucidating the era’s cultural debates, as when he covers disagreements between the NAACP, who decried Blaxploitation films as glorifying harmful depictions of Black people, and the artists involved in the films, who insisted on portraying alternatives to the “preachy respectability” that had previously characterized Hollywood depictions of Black characters. The result is a thoughtful and loving ode to the genre. (Jan.)
cohost of NPR’S Pop Culture Happy Hour and a Aisha Harris
Plenty of ink has been spilled and words have been said about the Blaxploitation era, but Black Caesars and Foxy Cleopatras is perhaps the most sweeping (and fun) exploration of the subject yet. Whether he’s discussing stone-cold classics or regrettable trash, Odie Henderson tells it like it is; he approaches these films and their creators with a palpable affection for the genre, without sacrificing his keen critical and analytical sensibilities.
Matt Zoller Seitz
A great book on a spectacular era of film history, by a spellbinding and hilarious storyteller.
Boston Globe
"Henderson… meets Blaxploitation where it lives, with respectful irreverence…Henderson has a palpable, unstuffy voice, and a point of view, neither of which keep him from taking his subject seriously and addressing it with authority."
Robert Daniels
With his critical recording of Blaxploitation cinema, Odie Henderson champions the moment when Hollywood anointed Black stories as king. A delightful guide to the major heroes and lesser-known creatives who’ve influenced Black culture and cinema for decades, Henderson provides a personal, hilarious, informative, spontaneous, and brazen point of view that stands as a bible for the era.
Booklist
"This is a celebration of an important era in the history of film, and readers will revel in its joyful tribute to blaxploitation’s influential films and their creators."
From the Publisher
This exuberant debut from Boston Globe film critic Henderson provides commentary on and social context for 1970s Blaxploitation films . . . a thoughtful and loving ode to the genre.”—Publishers Weekly
“A lively exploration of 1970s Blaxploitation films. Henderson is clearly fond of this era of film, [and] he gives these classic films, their stars (particularly Pam Grier), and the funky soundtracks their due. An enjoyable, funny, and in-depth examination of Blaxploitation films and their influence.”—Library Journal (Starred Review)
"This is a celebration of an important era in the history of film, and readers will revel in its joyful tribute to blaxploitation’s influential films and their creators."—Booklist
“Plenty of ink has been spilled and words have been said about the Blaxploitation era, but Black Caesars and Foxy Cleopatras is perhaps the most sweeping (and fun) exploration of the subject yet. Whether he’s discussing stone-cold classics or regrettable trash, Odie Henderson tells it like it is; he approaches these films and their creators with a palpable affection for the genre, without sacrificing his keen critical and analytical sensibilities.”—Aisha Harris, cohost of NPR’S Pop Culture Happy Hour and author of Wannabe: Reckonings with the Pop
“A great book on a spectacular era of film history, by a spellbinding and hilarious storyteller.”—Matt Zoller Seitz, author of The Wes Anderson Collection, Mad Men Carousel, and The Sopranos Session
“With his critical recording of Blaxploitation cinema, Odie Henderson champions the moment when Hollywood anointed Black stories as king. A delightful guide to the major heroes and lesser-known creatives who’ve influenced Black culture and cinema for decades, Henderson provides a personal, hilarious, informative, spontaneous, and brazen point of view that stands as a bible for the era.”—Robert Daniels
"Henderson… meets Blaxploitation where it lives, with respectful irreverence…Henderson has a palpable, unstuffy voice, and a point of view, neither of which keep him from taking his subject seriously and addressing it with authority."—Boston Globe
Library Journal
★ 01/01/2024
Boston Globe film critic Henderson's debut book is a lively exploration of 1970s Blaxploitation films. Blaxploitation (more of an era than a genre, according to Henderson) featured Black actors, writers, and directors creating low-budget films aimed at Black audiences, always with soulful soundtracks by such stars as Curtis Mayfield, Isaac Hayes, Willie Hutch, and Marvin Gaye; many became box office hits. Black and white critics often dismissed these films for their extreme violence, nudity, and sex. The NAACP coined the phrase "Blaxploitation" while denouncing Super Fly as a poor representation of the Black community because its main characters were sex workers, pimps, and drug dealers. But Black audiences enjoyed seeing Black people in leading roles as strong characters, which made these films financially successful. Henderson is clearly fond of this era of film, but that does not stop him from his own critiques of the misogyny in cult classics such as Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song, Shaft, and Willie Dynamite. However, he gives these classic films, their stars (particularly Pam Grier), and the funky soundtracks their due. VERDICT An enjoyable, funny, and in-depth examination of Blaxploitation films and their influence on contemporary cinema and television.—Leah K. Huey