Listener supported. WNYC Studios. This is the New Yorker Radio Hour, a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker. This is the New Yorker Radio Hour. I'm David Remnick. Ryan Coogler began his career in film as a realist. His indie debut is called Fruitvale Station. It's a tragedy about a police killing in the Bay Area train station, and it scrupulously followed the last day of the victim's life leading up to the shooting.
Coogler moved from there to the drama of Creed about a young boxer, a film that was in the line of Rocky. And then he went on to make the super commercial widescreen fantasy, a Marvel hit called Black Panther, of course. In his new movie, which is called Sinners, Ryan Coogler is still dealing with themes of race and history and faith. But this time he's packed it with vampires. What y'all doing? Just step aside and let me on in now.
Why you need him to do that? You big and strong enough to push passes? Well, I wouldn't be too polite now, would it, Miss Annie? I don't know why I'm talking to you anyway. Don't talk to him. You're talking to me right now. Why you can't just walk your big ass up in here without an invite, huh? Go ahead. Admit to it. Admit to what? That you're dead. I've been interested in talking to Ryan Coogler for years because I thought he had a really kind of
nuanced and subtle way of seeing the world, and certainly of seeing people. Here's staff writer Jelani Cobb. On the other side of Black Panther, which was this gigantic movie and, you know, made him the largest grossing Black filmmaker of all time, and I believe the youngest filmmaker to ever gross a billion dollars for a film, and
there was this kind of big picture of him, and I didn't know if all the kind of details of who he actually was as an artist had been filled in. And so I thought it would be interesting to write about him and kind of fill out the silhouette a little bit. Jelani Cobb sat down in our studio the other day with Ryan Coogler. It's always good to see you, bro. Good to see you as well. So, you know, I want to talk a little bit about how you approach a film that
That is simultaneously about religion. It's about music. It's about the relationship between fathers and sons. It's set in the Jim Crow South in the 1930s in Mississippi, so there's an element of race. Yeah.
And vampires. Yep. Yep. Yep. So, you know, of those themes, you know, how did the vampire element, you know, become part of that story? Yeah. Yeah. So I had the desire to make something that was uniquely personal, you know. And what that means is like I wanted to make the thing that only I could make. Look, all my films have been personal, right? Yeah.
I've been fortunate enough to build them as uniquely as a filmmaker could. But they all did start with something that existed outside of myself. With Fruitvale, we were adapting the story about a young man's life. A young man was murdered by
a law enforcement officer. And, you know, where I'm from in the Bay Area, there was a great awareness about Oscar Grant. And a lot of people knew him personally. But even if you didn't know him, you knew who he was, right? You saw what happened. You know, you saw the story play out. You saw the awful video footage with Creed.
it was a pre-existing franchise that I had an idea for entry into it. You know, I didn't, I never imagined that it would spawn, you know, sequels to that and things. I was looking at it as, I was looking at it as a singular thing at the time. And, and,
But, you know, it was a very personal story inspired by my father's love of that and all those Rocky movies and that love being handed down to me. But it was not something that came from me initially in its entirety, right? You know, with the Panther films, you know, I was hired onto that movie. You know what I mean? That was something that Marvel was making. They were looking for a director. You know, fortunately enough, they called me and were interested in what I was trying to do with it. You know, so this time, I had an opportunity that is very, like, it's a rare opportunity, and I knew it was.
because of the financial success that these previous films have had, that I could, you know, mortgage or leverage that success into doing something that's uniquely mine, that would not exist in the world, you know what I mean, if it wasn't for me, right, and what I like and what I'm into. So the film is really just based on my interests, you know what I'm saying? Like, I love horror movies, and I love, absolutely love music, you know, and music I use, uh,
It's the art form I use in so many different ways. You know, I use it if I want to communicate something to somebody that I love. I use it if I want to calm my mind. If I want to influence a room of strangers. As a kid, I used to use it to travel. You know what I'm saying? I hadn't been anywhere, but I would listen to Mobb Deep and Nas and say, oh, man, this is what New York must feel like. You know, listen to DMX and say, oh, man, this is what the East Coast must feel like, right? Can I say, I'm interested in this idea of this kind of film
representing a culmination, you know, that you've been working. Yes, sir. You know, kind of really well-received independent film, you know, Fruitvale, and then three franchise films that have been well-received artistically and commercially. Yes, sir. And then being able to spread your wings and, you know, do this project, which also made me think about, you know, another theme that's so prominent, you know, which is the theme of
I would say Christianity, but it's actually more kind of broadly spirituality since there are lots of different kinds of spiritual practices and beliefs that people, you know, foreground in the film. Yes. And I hadn't seen that in your previous work. And I wondered how that came to you, how it connects to your own beliefs, your own kind of thinking about spirituality and religion and how it made its way into this film. I mean, well, I'll tell you this, like,
I actually thought about this. In all four of my movies before this, right, there's a moment in the movie where a character experiences the afterlife, you know. And for me, those are the strongest moments that I remember either finding them in post-production or them always being like an intentional design when I was writing them. But it happens in this movie, too.
you know, in a lot of different ways. But it is something like retroactively I realized recently, you know, and it's something that I'm always dealing with. I was raised, you know, Christian, Baptist, Christian,
And, you know, in the black tradition, you know what I mean? And probably got a second wave of the great migration. Your family came from Texas, correct? My mother's family came from Texas through her matrilineal side. Her patrilineal side was from Mississippi. Oh, okay. Yeah. So her mother was from Port Arthur, Texas. She married a Mississippi man who was in Oakland. He passed away before I met him. And I remember, bro, I remember like being young and I was in Catholic school.
And it was a black Catholic school. You know, we had a lot of those coming up. So I had religion in school, which was like a different type of vibe, right? You go to mass and sit down, stand up, sit down, stand up. You know what I'm saying? You know, like singing these slow songs. You know what I'm saying? Like, you know, and I felt very disassociated with, you know, it's like being in class, but worse. You know what I'm saying? To be honest. And then I would go to church on Sundays where, you know, my mom singing in the choir, belting out notes and my pastor like,
you know, grabbing people, slamming them. So it's like the Baptist thread and the Catholic thread, these two things are not the same. Not the same, but, but, but, but, you know, I recognize some of the songs that were sung differently. You know what I mean? And, and I remember gaining like, um, like essentially like consciousness enough to understand that, oh man, like, like my parents, parents,
are dead, some of them. You know, I remember having conversations with my dad about his parents who had both died before I was born. My mom's dad had died before I was born. And I remember, you know, coming up to that age, three, four, five, and asking about their parents and hearing about how many of their parents had died. You know, so are y'all going to die? You know, and being up late at night, you know, when they telling me about heaven,
And how, you know, it goes on forever and trying to like understand this concept of an eternity. Right. You know what I'm saying? Right, right, right. Or to understand this concept of my mom saying, yeah, but my father is still with me. And I know he's proud of me. I know he's proud of you. You know, like in this concept of my relationship with the afterlife, with my own mortality, and how that looks through a Catholic lens or a Christian lens or a Baptist lens, you know, yeah.
It was something that I've been reckoning with forever. And I'm looking back on my work and I'm like, oh, yeah, I'm still reckoning with that. You know, and for me, you know, this film is about a lot of things, man. But it's also about the act of coping, you know. The coping part of the film, I think, comes in even more.
on some level to the kinds of vampire element of it too. Absolutely. Which is one of the things I thought was really interesting because, you know, I've seen my share of vampire films. I don't think I'd ever seen the kind of vampire question presented in a spiritual frame in the way that these characters do in some ways. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, that was very important to me, man. Like, if there was anything that was akin to
the techniques that I learned from franchise filmmaking, it was how do I deal with the vampire? Because the vampire is not an idea that I own. You know what I mean? None of these ideas in the film are ideas that I own. You know, like the tortured blues musician, you know, the gangster identical twins, the conjured woman, the racially ambiguous person, you know. So these archetypes. These archetypes. You know what I mean? I was very, I was very, very,
serious about going there, dealing with the archetype with this movie and the international shared experience and knowledge of what a vampire is and what that means and the expectations, right? So for me, it was like, all right, how do I make this concept my own? How is this a vampire the way that I like to tell stories, the one that's unique to me, you know? And the movie deals with, you know, the Faustian deal. You know, like I was very, I was very like, like,
obsessed with the ancient. You know what I mean? The most notorious Delta Blue story is the story of the musician who goes to the crossroads. Oftentimes it's thought of being in Clarksdale, Mississippi. That's right. And making a deal with a nefarious metaphysical character. Right. The Robert Johnson narrative. The Robert Johnson narrative. Now, there's some research
most extensively with Amiri Baraka's work. Oh, yeah. And also... Blues people. Exactly. The critic and playwright. Yeah, yeah, exactly. And Deep Blues by Robert Palmer. Mm-hmm. And they talk about how sometimes it's the devil. Mm-hmm. Sometimes it's Papa Legba. You know what I mean? Papa Legba, right. It's these ancient... Yeah. You know... It's a reference to the deity Papa Legba who was...
common and kinds of African forms of spirituality that came with enslaved black people into the South. But yeah, sometimes people have that idea that Johnson is at the crossroads, not talking to the devil. He's talking to this deity figure, Papa Legba. It's African spiritual figure. Exactly. But that idea of the Faustian bargain, you know, and not just to be a good guitar player,
But to have a better life, you know what I mean? Like, what kind of, how much of yourself do you have to give up to do X, Y? And we all make them, you know what I mean? Like, whether it's on a movie deal or a publishing job or a teaching gig, you know, it's always like, man, what of myself am I going to give up?
to have whatever this thing offers, you know, for me, maybe in the distance, momentarily, for my family. You know, it was the bargain that my parents had to make to send me to parochial school, right? So I was, when I realized that that was the most notorious story of this music from this place, I said, oh, the movie has to be about that. You know, and what a vampirism is
you know, a deal that they're selling. You know what I mean? And what is the upside to it? And what's the cost? Yeah, that's amazing. Director Ryan Coogler, speaking with The New Yorker's Jelani Cobb. More in a moment.
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America's boys are falling behind in school. "Boys too often end up being treated like malfunctioning girls." The gap emerges before boys hit third grade. So more than ever, experts are saying with urgency that something must be done. "The quote actually comes from Frederick Douglass: 'It's easier to build strong boys than rebuild broken men.' Today's boys are tomorrow's men."
I'm Meghna Chakrabarty, host of On Point from WBUR. Our new series is Falling Behind, The Miseducation of America's Boys. Follow On Point wherever you get your podcasts. One of the things, you know, when I was talking with Zinzi, your wife, and, you know, your frequent collaborator and co-producer on this film,
And she compared this with Black Panther, with the two Black Panther films. And you talked openly about before you made Black Panther going to Africa to actually get a kind of understanding of black Americans' relationship with the African continent. And Zinzi pointed out that it was like you were grappling with the questions of distant African ancestry in that film.
And here grappling with more immediate questions of, you know, ancestry in this country, in Mississippi, where the film is set, you know, even though it's shot in Louisiana, but it's set in Mississippi. And that this is the same sort of kind of ancestral exploration happening here. Absolutely, man. And it was so much, man, it was so...
It's such a blessing to be able to make this movie. It's very sharp of Zinzi to make that assessment. She's the sharpest person I know, man. And, yeah, no, she's absolutely right. Like, and what's funny is I went to Mississippi, and that is the most African place I've ever been outside of being on the continent. What do you mean by that? Number one, the feeling that I got. It was a feeling that I got when I first touched down on the continent. And I get it every time I go back, you know. And...
It's difficult to explain. I tried to think about it in a tactile manner and tried to translate that into the film. I remember I got out of the car in the Mississippi Delta and I was like, oh, wow, I feel like I'm back. And that was, for me, was deeply profound, man. It was like, oh...
through the process of making Black Panther, I realized, all right, African Americans are, are extremely African. You know what I mean? Like, like it's, it's, you know, we may be more African than we know, you know, and realizing that, that, that the, you know, the 400 year distance from the continent, you know, it did not, it, it was no way it was ever going to change thousands of years of, you know, you know what I mean? Of, of, of culture. Right. Um,
But with this, it was like, oh, we affected this place. You know what I mean? Like, we brought Africa here. You know, like, that was what I realized was...
We had the power of transformation, man, over landscape, over feeling. You know what I mean? And it's known that the music came from that place, like the most influential form of blues music, the Delta Blues. Right. That's where it came from, that spot. And that realizing that, oh, we didn't just bring Africa to this patch of land here, which is the American South. Right. We didn't just do that. And we also, these people who lived in these places,
awful conditions, you know, produced an art form that changes the world and continues to change. Like, it redefined everything. It was before and it was after. You know what I mean? That, to me, was like, oh, this movie's big. Like, this movie's bigger than I thought. I thought I was making something small. Right. You know what I'm saying? But, no, I'm making something massive. And I realized in that moment, if I do this right, there's an argument that there shouldn't be a bigger movie. You know, like, from there, it was like, okay, IMAX,
That's actually what I wanted to talk about, because literally the size of the film. The last time I saw you, we were in the IMAX offices, and they were showing the reels of the film. First off, I had no idea the reels were that big, like 500, 600 pounds to show this film. But you were talking about how significant it was for this film in particular to be shown in those dimensions.
And can you talk a little bit about why you felt like that was important? Yeah, man. I mean, I'm getting into relationships now. The first two films I remember watching were Boys in the Hood and Malcolm X. And I'm fortunate enough to have gotten to know John Singleton before he passed away. Rest in peace, John. And he became a mentor of mine. We went to the same alma mater.
And I've become fortunate enough. USC Film School. USC Film School, School of Cinematic Arts. And I'm fortunate enough to have gotten to know Spike Lee. And he's become a mentor for me. And I know from John's mouth that...
He told me, Boys in the Hood is because he went to, he made Boys in the Hood because he went to go see Do the Right Thing. And got so inspired. And also so jealous. You know what I mean? Of Spike Lee's film, right. Of the movie. He said, man, I want something like this for Los Angeles. Wow. Goes home and writes Boys, right? I watched that as a child. Spike, who's obviously, both these guys are cinephiles. You know what I'm saying? They both have an encyclopedic. It's hard talking about John in past tense. Mm-hmm.
They both have an encyclopedic knowledge of the craft, right? And hearing Spike talk about Malcolm X and going door to door with black celebrities to raise money for... What does that mean to you, to have to do that? I've never had to. I'm getting emotional because it's hitting me now because I'm talking about the ease of which I can make a vampire movie this expensive. And Malcolm X is one of the most important Americans that ever lived. You know what I'm saying? Um...
You know, not even for our culture, but for pop culture. You know, you get no X-Men without Malcolm X. You know what I'm saying? Like, just you get no X-Klan. You get no... And the fact that he had to go door to door to the black community to get enough money to go make Malcolm X... The story of Malcolm X in a way that it deserved. You know what I'm saying? That just hit me like a ton of bricks, coupled with the fact that John ain't here no more. You know what I'm saying? So for me...
I saw both those movies, bro. You know, in the epic scope of that. And when I talked to Spike, he knew what an epic film should look like, what it should feel like. He knew that Malcolm's story was deserving of that. And I realized, oh man, you can make the argument that Delta Blues music is the most important American contribution to global popular culture. You know, you can make that argument. And,
These people weren't important, bro. Like, they weren't scientists. They weren't physicists. You know what I'm saying? These were just human beings trying to make it under a back-breaking form of American apartheid. Breaking everybody's backs. You know what I'm saying? And they were just trying... And that act...
you know, that act of affirmation of humanity, you know, that deserves epic treatment too. It deserves the most epic treatment. And I'm sitting there, you know what I'm saying, like with Spike's my mentor now, you know what I mean? And I ain't, I'm making a movie about blues vampires. I ain't have to knock on Oprah's door. You know what I'm saying? And I ain't have to ask Michael Jordan for money, you know? You know, I have to do that, right? I said, man, I gotta go for it. You know what I'm saying? Because this music, you know,
It changed the world. And these people had nothing. You know what I mean? Listen, this has been an incredibly insightful kind of tour of how you think about film and what filmmaking represents to you. So I want to say thank you for taking the time to talk with us today. And good luck with the film. Right on, bro. I appreciate you. Director Ryan Coogler.
The film Sinners comes out next week, and Jelani Cobb is a staff writer at The New Yorker, and he's also dean of the School of Journalism at Columbia University. This is The New Yorker Radio Hour. I'm David Remnick, and thanks for being with us today. Hopefully you'll join us next week. The New Yorker Radio Hour is a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker. Our theme music was composed and performed by Meryl Garbus of TuneArts, with additional music by Jared Paul.
This episode was produced by Max Balton, Adam Howard, David Krasnow, Jeffrey Masters, Louis Mitchell, Jared Paul, and Ursula Sommer. With guidance from Emily Botin and assistance from Michael May, David Gable, Alex Barish, Victor Guan, and Alejandra Deket. And we had additional help this week from Jake Loomis. The New Yorker Radio Hour is supported in part by the Trina Endowment Fund.
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