The World, the Flesh and the Devil: Harry Belafonte, Race and Apocalypse
Episode description
As usual there are spoilers ahead!
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Please be aware that we touch upon sexual assault in this episode due to the content of the film.
The time codes for those sections are:
44:22 till 44:33
48:55 till 49:05
Description
USA in 1959 was on the brink of a decade that would see major changes in the country in terms of race. But never without opposition. It was also the year in which Harry Belafonte, at the peak of his fame, would star in The World, the Flesh and the Devil.
The film centres Belafonte’s character, Ralph Burton, as the last man on earth. A Black man at a time when the country was wrangling with desegregation. Ralph is joined by Sarah and Ben: White survivors who enter what was for a while his world. This episode focuses on race and racism and I am so lucky to have two amazing guests to help us put the plot and frustrations into context.
Mark Bould is a professor of Film and Literature at the University of West England, Bristol. He has written/edited extensively about science fiction cinema.
Stéphanie Larrieux is the associate director of the Centre for the study of Race and Ethnicity at Brown University. She wrote about the World, The Flesh and the Devil as part of her PhD.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction
01:07 Why is this film largely unknown?
03:10 Source material
10:05 Harry Belafonte
16:25 An empty Manhattan
18:53 The last man on earth
23:12 Double sight and racial panopticism
24:26 Cultured and capable
28:03 Sarah’s unnerving feet
31:31 The frustrations of this film
35:26 Free, white and 21: Ralph and Sarah’s relationship
39:25 The hair cutting scene
41:42 Ben comes to town: Mel Ferrer
45:31 The ending
47:09 Inger Stevens
48:29 Ben’s “idealism”
49:47 The title
50:28 Black protagonists in science fiction
53:36 Legacy
NEXT EPISODE!
Next episode we will be talking about On The Beach (1959) starring Gregory Peck, Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire and Anthony Perkins.
You can visit Just Watch in your region to find out where you can watch this film although it seems to be easily available to rent or buy online.
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