The Problem of the Hero Featured, Reviews Film Threat
Jun 19, 2023
Historical fiction is a delightful genre to me. To take a slice of history and breathe context into it through fictional prose is a remarkable endeavor. Thus, I come today to review director Shaun Dozier and writers James A. Hodge and Ian Finley’s The Problem of the Hero, which concerns the adaptation of Richard Wright’s Native Son to the Great White Way.
Adapting a novel can be fraught with complications. Native Son was the first novel written by Black Man that ever went to the Broadway stage. To that end, Richard Wright (J. Mardice Henderson) contracts to work with then-established playwright Paul Green (David Zum Brennen). We witness the two perspectives present in the thirties. Green, an optimistic patriotic white man, believes in the future promise of the United States; while his fellow Whites may act detestable, Green would rather work through the system. He cannot dismantle the country over race.
Richard Wright, conversely, has been so mistreated by Jim Crow America that he has chosen to expatriate. He means to leave America behind for Paris, where he believes freedom exists. As portrayed in The Problem of the Hero, the author has a solid foundation for his position. The U.S. of A. is no place for a card-carrying member of the Communist Party. The conflict between Capitalist and Marxist comes to a head over the ending of the play’s script.
“…prepared a wondrous play and had a falling out over a paragraph less than a page long.”
For Green, the protagonist, Bigger Thomas, needs to be humanized prior to the play’s conclusion. It would not do for the white audience of this play to view Bigger Thomas as some unrepentant scared man. In his estimation, everyone deserves a shot at redemption. Being Black, Wright vehemently disagrees. Jim Crow laws seek to dehumanize Richard and his kin. For the author, the play must end with Bigger Thomas as scared, confused, and incapable of making sense of how his murder of a white woman led him to death row. In Bigger’s mind, all he was trying to do was remove the evidence that he was ever anywhere near a white girl in her bed chamber.
The Problem of the Hero centers on Paul and Richard, and Henderson and Brennen are electric with brotherly chemistry. The fights, disagreements, and collaborations portrayed in this fictionalized account are master classes in acting. The eyes of both men are fully engaged and riddled with emotional intensity. As we know, acting on film is central in the eyes. Both leads possess gloriously active and engaging eyes.
Credit also is due to the writers and director. Hodge and Finley crafted a superb screenplay, deep and insightful. It really walks you through the perspective and mindset of the protagonists. Dozier knocks his first feature out of the park. This is a passionate, blazing, and deeply enticing human drama. Two men, brothers from different mothers, prepared a wondrous play and had a falling out over a paragraph less than a page long. The director captures the mood elegantly. I am intrigued to see his future endeavors.
The Problem of the Hero is an excellent example of historical fiction. I absolutely loved it. This is worth your time to watch it wherever it ends up screening. Seek this out.
Publisher: Source link
Prime Video Orders Crime Thriller ‘Calamities’ From Glen Powell
The Taylor Sheridan universe (aka "the Sheridan-verse") has become an unprecedented force in the television space, with the hit neo-Western drama Yellowstone at its core. The flagship show, following the Dutton family's fight to maintain their Montana ranch, launched in…
Apr 12, 2026
‘The Pitt’ Star Noah Wyle Teases Season 3 Time Jump & Winter Setting
As The Pitt heads toward an even final few episodes for Season 2, the stage is already being set for the upcoming third season. The star in front and behind the camera has revealed new details about what audiences should…
Apr 11, 2026
Earth’ Season 2 Casts Peter Dinklage as Series Regular
While screenwriter, television showrunner, and director Noah Hawley is already lining up his next feature film project, that seemingly hasn't stopped developments on the second season of Alien: Earth. The series, which premiered on FX last year, was a project…
Apr 10, 2026
‘Foundation’s Lee Pace Teases Even “Bigger” Story in Season 4
The return of Apple TV’s critically acclaimed, yet somehow still sorely underrated, three-part science fiction epic has just been given the perfect hype, with a returning star not only offering a production update but also calling the next outing “bigger”…
Apr 9, 2026







