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Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property

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Directed by
  
Charles Burnett

Music by
  
Todd Capps

Director
  
Charles Burnett

Cinematography
  
John L. Demps Jr.

Editor
  
Frank Christopher

6.9/10
IMDb


Produced by
  
Frank Christopher

Initial release
  
2003

Music director
  
Todd Capps

Costume design
  
Sharen Davis

Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters178031p1780

Written by
  
Charles Burnett Frank Christopher Kenneth S. Greenberg

Edited by
  
Michael Colin Frank Christopher

Release date
  
February 16, 2003 (2003-02-16) (Pan African Film Festival)

Similar
  
The Birth of a Nation, Being Evel, Just to Get a Rep, Bruce Lee: The Curse of the Dra, Big Pun: The Legacy

Nat turner a troublesome property


Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property is a 2003 documentary film about Nat Turner directed by Charles Burnett.

Contents

Nat turner slave rebellion 1831 insurrection in southampton virginia


Cast

The documentary interweaves Thomas R. Gray's 1831 The Confessions of Nat Turner, William Styron's 1966 novel of the same name, and additional source material by Harriet Beecher Stowe, William Wells Brown, and Randolph Edmonds. Different actors played Nat Turner, depending on the source material.

  • Nat Turner
  • Carl Lumbly (Gray)
  • Tommy Hicks (Edmonds)
  • James Opher (Styron)
  • Michael LeMelle (Brown)
  • Patrick Waller (Stowe)
  • Tom Nowicki played Thomas R. Gray, and Billy Dye played Young Nat Turner.

    Release

    The documentary was first shown as a "work in progress" at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival in 2002 and was subsequently edited to be 26 minutes shorter. The documentary screened at multiple film festivals throughout 2003 and aired on PBS the following year.

    Critical reception

    Scott Foundas of Variety said the documentary was "insightful, if somewhat foreshortened", finding better the "work in progress" version shared in 2002 that was 26 minutes longer. Foundas said, "While this re-edit is an improvement over the original in other respects — the cutting is more fluid, the narration has been re-recorded and the archival material... has been three-dimensionally embossed... it seems, overall, a more timid, less confrontational movie."

    Jonathan Rosenbaum, writing for the Chicago Reader, called the documentary "brilliant" and described Burnett's goal: "Interviewing two dozen historians and theorists, half of them black, Burnett treats all their interpretations, many of which he dramatizes, as equally credible—a radical but plausible approach given how little is known about Turner. He's most interested in charting how the interpretations were arrived at and why those of white and black commentators often differ."

    References

    Nat Turner: A Troublesome Property Wikipedia