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Alex’s unfamiliarity with the traits that are practically intrinsic to Dennis and his crew is due to him growing up in mostly White foster homes and institutions, places where any shreds of knowledge about his heritage were often met with violence. McQueen doesn’t dwell on these acts of brutality, but at one point, series cinematographer Shabier Kirchner lingers on Alex’s face as he lays on the floor in the straitjacket unfairly imposed on him by school security. The camera pulls away, but slowly returns to the young man’s stunned expression. It’s a mirror image of his facial expression in the opening shot, except there are still flickers of innocence in his eyes. The visage on the adult, jail-bound Alex is completely devoid of any hope.
As in the other installments, music plays a major part in the development and enjoyment of our protagonists. Alex and Dennis hang out at record stores, with Alex getting an education in the same reggae music that caused him trouble back at school. He puts records on layaway and even becomes a selector at parties. McQueen and his co-writer Alastair Siddons foreshadow the ties between Alex’s love for music and his eventual career as an author of young adult books by giving us a snippet of a radio interview where author Roald Dahl talks about listening to “good music” like Beethoven before he starts writing. That comment is drowned out by reggae music, as if replacing Dahl’s musical inspirations with Alex’s own.
That dream takes money, which leads Alex to the employ of the neighborhood drug kingpin Cutlass (Johann Myers). Myers steals the movie with his eccentric portrayal, scarfing down food while forcing Alex to completely disrobe to verify he is not wired. Cutlass even questions Alex’s accent, proving that all that Caribbean practice didn’t take all the British out of it. Once this deal is made, one assumes that drug sales are how Alex winds up with Simeon, but it’s more complicated than that. Here’s where research on the 1981 Brixton riot will come in handy.
Of the five films in McQueen’s opus, “Alex Wheatle” is the one I liked least. It is not a bad film, it just feels so much smaller and more unfinished than the others. The framework structure, despite good acting by Gee, is extraneous and generic. Granted, it may be a tad unfair to wage comparisons with its companion pieces, but “Small Axe” is held together by the repeated themes it interrogates across the series. Even as a standalone feature, this installment falters by keeping its main character at arm’s length. We never get close enough to Alex Wheatle to feel as if we know him. Despite my mild dissatisfaction, I believe that distancing is on purpose, a part of the film’s design. Even after his big, emotional scene and his decision to start writing about his experiences, our protagonist is still growing, still learning who he is. He’s incomplete as the film ends, and the movie reflects that in its construction and its execution. Cole does a good job playing these intentions, but he’s overshadowed by the more intriguing supporting characters. Still, the questions raised here are interesting ones that we rarely see applied to Black people in movies, which is important. As far as satisfaction goes, however, your mileage may vary.

Odie Henderson
Odie “Odienator” Henderson has spent over 33 years working in Information Technology. He runs the blogs Big Media Vandalism and Tales of Odienary Madness. Read his answers to our Movie Love Questionnaire here.
Small Axe: Alex Wheatle (2020)
Rated NR
66 minutes

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