The White Savior Returns: Has it been 3 years already?

Merq (a returning MMW guest contributor!)
matthew perry ron clark story Any self-respecting, gluttonous “Law & Order” viewer here must have seen the previews for TNT’s made-for-TV movie, “The Ron Clark Story.” If you haven’t seen them yet, you absolutely have to.

The movie features Matthew Perry as a white teacher who joins an “inner-city” public school system, whose enrollment is 99%-black (but I’m sure you’ll see a white kid or two— hey, tokenism works both ways). He gladly takes on these students nobody cares about, turning them into… oh, who the hairy hell are we kidding? We come across this exact synopsis every three years or so.

My early pick for Best Line this time?

“Nobody wants them, and I do. So what’s the problem?” (ahh, what a saint.)

Before Antonio Banderas’ “Take the Lead,” the last White Savior flick I remember was some drivel supposedly set to air on Lifetime a few years back (somebody help me out here), but the most successful film in this genre has to be Michelle Pfeiffer’s last hurrah, “Dangerous Minds.”

Still, it seems one of the effects of global warming is an increase in the speed of the earth’s revolution around the sun, because:

  • it’s been scientifically proven that these White Savior movies come around only once in three years,
  • and my cellphone, computer, and even cable box suggest that “Take the Lead” was released just this year. So much for state-of-the-art technology, right?

Anyway, there have been a few Black Teacher versions of this narrative, but somehow they don’t leave me needing a shower quite as urgently as these White Savior flicks. More after the jump…


Why? Let’s look at some of the more memorable examples.

Morgan Freeman in “Lean on Me” (1989): Here, the students, though engaged in stereotypical activities, were much fuller characters– each with his own individual flaws, virtues, etc. Still a treaclefest, but it didn’t set up the students as creatures to be alternately pitied and feared. Plus, Freeman’s Principal Joe Clark is a bit of a tyrannical asshole (with a heart of gold, of course).

Whoopi Goldberg in “Sister Act 2″ (1993): Right. Like these kids were really in any danger.

Samuel L. Jackson in “187″ (1997): Back when SammyJack actually read scripts before signing on to a picture. This is no shlocky tale of a good teacher who doesn’t give up on his “loser” students. It’s a dark film with a near-existentialist outlook on the futility of good works. SammyJack doesn’t exactly care about these kids when he begins teaching in New York, but they’re more than just a means to a paycheck. However, after he is attacked by his own students, he moves to an LA-area school where he begins a zombie-like existence reminiscent of Meursault in Albert Camus’ “L’Etranger.” Sure, he helps some kids along the way, but somehow you don’t get the feeling he really wanted to.

Thus, you see, those movies don’t really count as White Savior flicks—an assertion that is bound to leave many asking the Moe Syzlak-esque question, “Well if you’re so sure what it ain’t, how’s about telling us what it am?!”

To that end, let’s run down a few essential elements of a White Savior flick.

1. Race is NEVER mentioned… at least, not by the Savior:
These kids are… BLACK? Only a racist like you would notice that, for I don’t see color! In “Music of the Heart,” Meryl Streep’s Roberta Guaspari—a violin teacher—has to deal with parents telling her they don’t want a white teacher teaching her son “dead white man’s music.”
The message: “Us whites are the oppressed ones! Left to us, we’d have a color-blind society in a heartbeat!”

2. The Jaded Black Administrator:
Each of these flicks must have someone of color there to devalue the kids, just in time for White Saviorman to cluck his tongue and declare in his/her softest (but most determined) voice, just how amazing these kids are. “Ron Clark” has one of these, and I tell you, I could’ve sworn that scene was directed by Leni Riefenstahl for the “White Savior for Canonization” committee.
The Message: These people are so problematic, even their own have given up on them… but not us! White Man’s Burden lives on!

3. The words, “Based on a true story” :
Whenever these issues are brought up, there is always a mass of people rushing to point out that it was based on a true story. Well, that shuts me up, doesn’t it? To quote Bruce A. Williams and Michael X. Delli Carpini, “it is not enough for movies to say only that they are ‘based on a true story. For politically relevant media, how far and in what ways dramatic license was used must be made much clearer than is currently the norm.”
The Message: See? That’s how “these people” really are!

I could go on, but why bother?

So yeah, I hate White Savior movies… no fancy ending here.

Trackbacks & Pings

  1. September 2006 New Demographic Newsletter at New Demographic - an anti-racism training company on 24 Sep 2006 at 5:31 pm

    […] Guest contributor Merq tears apart TNT’s made-for-TV movie, “The Ron Clark Story” and asks why these White Savior movies seem to get made every 3 years. He identifies the three key elements each of these movies must have: 1) Race is never mentioned, at least not by the white savior. 2) There is always a jaded black administrator present to devalue the kids, as a contrast to the white savior. 3) It is always “based on a true story.” […]

Comments

  1. Anonymous wrote:

    May I point out that Antonio Banderas has Latin/Hispanic ethnicity and is considered a minority though he is considered White/Hispanic in the national census. Even so, it should still be pointed out that Mixed Media Watch also considers Hispanic/Latin culture attention-worthy in regards to mixed media culture. So using Antonio Banderas as a stereotypical White Savior example does not further prove your point.

  2. site admin wrote:

    That’s a good point, Anonymous. I think Banderas’s character in the movie was also Latino (based on the reviews I vaguely remember) so that’s probably not the best example of the white savior flick. Though it can definitely be classified in the Teacher Saves Inner City Youth category of movies. –CVK

  3. gatamala wrote:

    WHOOOSH [flying hand motion] right over Anonymous’ head!! And in a most illogical way!

    Does Jaime Escalante from Stand & Deliver count??

    HAHAHAHAHA Merq when I saw that commercial I thought UHHHHH How many times are they going to make this movie?

    You’re killing me with Leni Riefenstahl! AHAHAHAHAHAHA I guess, you could call it Triumph of THEIR Will Over Colored Shiftlessness.

    Jaded Black Administrator - is not only jaded, but actively part of the problem. Note how he/she is always superintendent/guidance counselor.

    You left out: Ignorant/Jealous Ghetto/Immigrant Parent Who Does Not Understand the Value of Education & Fails to See Child’s Gift

  4. Lyonside wrote:

    Anonymous:

    Not to hijack a thread, but your post made me wonder: If you’re born and raised in Spain, as in on the European continent and part of the EU, are you really considered in the same ethnicity as someone from Mexico, Guatamala, Peru?

    How does one draw the line? (I know, the US census for citizens when it comes to ethnicity and especially “Hispanics” (i.e. those of Latin American origin) is ridiculous)

    I suspect that to a European, Banderas would be considered white, or merely Spanish.

  5. Gandalf Mantooth wrote:

    My major quibble is the three years bit. “White Savior” movies are not limited to this kind of “dangerous mind” setting. It runs the gamut from Mississippi Burning to Snow Falling on Cedars. It’s anytime a caucasian person comes to the “aid” of a historically beleaguered ethnic group. You will see a white savior movie every year because white savior movies tend to get Oscar nominations.

    It is ironic that the prototype for the dangerous mind type of white savior movies is To Sir With Love.

  6. Adrianna wrote:

    I ‘m done with the genre ! Really Don’t they have any immagination. If you want another turn on the white savior story there is this movie “Half-Nelson”, except in this movie the inner city white teacher is a crack head. And if they do another dance movies I’m going to be really angry

  7. site admin wrote:

    Oh but Adrianna, there *is* another dance movie coming out! :) Although I don’t think there’s the usual interracial romance in this one. It’s called Step Up: http://movies.aol.com/movie/step-up/25911/main –CVK

  8. Adrianna wrote:

    I thought it did not count since both character are white. I was releived.

  9. brad wrote:

    Actually, Spaniards like Antonio Banderas are usually not considered for categorization as Latino, which focuses on people of the Americas. Realistically, could you see Christina Aguillera or Cameron Diaz as the posterchildren for Latino Americans who suffer discrimination? No. They’re blonde, blue-eyed, and white-skinned.

    Antonio Banderas operates in the same place as Andy Garcia…white Latin man who can slip into the role of Italian or dark handsome white guy. No one thinks of Banderas or Garcia as non-white, whereas brown/darkbrown-skinned actors like Luis Guttierez, George Lopez, or Adam Rodriguez are definitely not seen as white and could not slip easily into comfort zone that Andy Garcia had as lover of Meg Ryan or Desi Arnaz had has husband of Lucille Ball.

    As for white savior movie actors, let’s not forget Keanu Reeves or Goldie Hawn who starred in their sports related roles. (Sorry Jen/CVK, but Keanu plays as a white guy in his roles and not as an Asian or mixed Eurasian.)

    I think Samuel L. Jackson in “187″ is really about a man on the edge who loses his grip on reality.

  10. site admin wrote:

    brad - no need to be sorry! :) He absolutely plays white in almost all his roles –CVK

  11. gatamala wrote:

    what about Little Buddha?

  12. brad wrote:

    Gatamala,

    Yep, Little Buddha was the exception to the rule in which Keanu played Buddha–who was a South Asian Indian; but the majority of his roles are white men, which he has every right to portray. However, I do think that it’s sad that he can’t have a role in which his mom or dad or granparent isn’t Asian–why not a photo with the parent/grandparent. No need to dig into it the history; just leave it and move on. How cool would it have been in the Matrix film where we see a home video of Neo of as a child if the child had looked Eurasian or one of his parents were Asian? How would that have impacted the film? Wouldn’t that have been a nice nod for Keanu’s Eurasian and Asian fans? Look, on the screen, there’s someone who has a family like me!

  13. Merq wrote:

    Gatamala:
    “WHOOOSH [flying hand motion] right over Anonymous’ head!!”

    Tell me about it!

    You left out: Ignorant/Jealous Ghetto/Immigrant Parent Who Does Not Understand the Value of Education & Fails to See Child’s Gift.

    DAMMIT! How could I forget??

    Gandalf:
    I definitely hear you, but I wanted to focus on the “White Savior Teacher” subgenre… I guess I should’ve clarified.

    Brad:
    As the kids would say, “word.”
    Re: “To Sir With Love”… yeah, funny, right?
    Re: “187″… I know it isn’t a Savior movie. That’s why I chose to list it under “what it ain’t,” and not “what it am.”

  14. justin wrote:

    Gandalph is forgetting that Sidney Poitier graduated from the Blackboard Jungle as the pet Judas sheep. My hyper-paranoid reading of this genre is that it’s usually a tough loving military strong man who’s scraping up people from the margins just to be gun fodder in his army. That’s why the second Alien movie was so popular, that’s how people make sense of those characters and their backgrounds.

  15. nic wrote:

    Just a brief note on the Keanu Reeves reference that was alluded to–if you watch any of his movies, his character usual does not have parents or
    one is always missing (the present parent is always Caucasian). In the movie “Constantine” there wer two childhood versions of his character who were portrayed by “exotic-looking” children.

  16. Staci wrote:

    Just wanted to say, great thread!!!

  17. Merq wrote:

    many thanks, staci

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