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Fuqua juggles Will Smith comeback and slavery politics in ‘Emancipation’

Directing “Emancipation,” a brutal and harrowing film about slavery set deep in the alligator-infested Louisiana swamps, was always going to be a challenge for Antoine Fuqua — and then his star Will Smith slapped Chris Rock at the Oscars.

Despite reports that Apple could delay its release until the raging controversy around Smith’s actions subsides, the movie hits theaters this weekend and streams globally next Friday, raising fears that audiences and Oscars voters could boycott it.

“Absolutely, I have big concerns about that,” Fuqua told AFP.

But “Will’s been a good guy, in front of all of us, for 37 years,” he said of Smith, who rose to fame in the 1990s.

“I hope we have more compassion in our hearts, to at least go see the work he did — because he did amazing work in the movie. They all did.”

“Emancipation” is inspired by the story of a Black man who defied enormous odds to escape slavery during the United States’ Civil War.

“Whipped Peter” became a global symbol of the horrors of slavery, after photographs of his bare back — utterly mutilated by lashings he received on a cotton plantation — circulated around the world.

Less is known about the real man, who Smith depicts fleeing sadistic slavers and evading alligators, snakes and other perils in the Deep South swamps, in pursuit of freedom for him and his family.

Paced more like an escape thriller than a somber historical drama, “Emancipation” is as graphic in showing the savagery inflicted on the enslaved as recent films like “12 Years a Slave.”

The movie was shot on location in real Louisiana swamps, in what Smith at Wednesday’s world premiere in Los Angeles called “an absolute monster of a difficult film to make.”

But while Smith’s performance has drawn praise, critics have pondered whether it is too soon for a comeback, just eight months after the notorious Oscars night.

Smith resigned from the Academy for striking Rock on stage over a quip about his wife’s hair loss. He has been banned from attending the Oscars for a decade, though can still win Academy Awards.

An image rehabilitation campaign has included online apologies and a late-night TV show appearance in which Smith told host Trevor Noah that he “was going through something that night” and had “just lost it.”

On “the question of the slap,” Fuqua is unequivocal that “it was wrong.”

But the “Training Day” director added: “Will’s a good guy. I stand behind him.

“I was with him for a couple years, man, I’ve been in the swamps with him. The guy never complained once.”

– ‘Scary’ –

For Fuqua, part of the urgency for releasing the film now is a US political climate in which the legacy of slavery has become a hot-button, polarized issue.

“You hear about things in America especially where there’s discussion of not teaching about slavery in some of the schools… like they want to erase the past,” he said.

Republicans have slammed proposed education reforms that would address systemic racism…

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