Nate Parker's film to debut at Venice Film Festival
He has been little heard from since rape allegation derailed his breakthrough biopic The Birth of a Nation
Nate Parker's attempted comeback will begin at the Venice Film Festival with the premiere of his first film since a rape allegation from the director's past derailed the release of his Nat Turner biopic The Birth of a Nation.
The Venice Film Festival announced Wednesday that Parker's American Skin will debut in its "Sconfini" section. Parker's new film also carries Spike Lee's backing. American Skin is touted as a Spike Lee presentation. In a statement, Lee called Parker his brother and declared the film "a brave tour de force."
Parker has been little heard from since his breakthrough as writer-director-star in 2016. After the lauded debut of The Birth of a Nation at the Sundance Film Festival fetched a record $17.5 million US purchase, the newfound attention around Parker resurrected a 1999 rape allegation against him from when he was a student at Penn State University.
Parker has maintained his innocence. He was acquitted in a 2001 trial, though his college roommate, Jean Celestin (who helped create The Birth of a Nation), was initially found guilty of sexual assault. That conviction was later overturned when the accuser declined to testify for a retrial. The alleged victim killed herself in 2012.
The Birth of a Nation ultimately made little impact at the box office and its once promising Oscar campaign fizzled. Whether the reception will be any better for Parker's latest film remains to be seen. In the time since, the #MeToo movement has swept over the movie industry, putting new scrutiny on men accused of sexual harassment and sexual assault.
American Skin, which Parker wrote, directed and stars in, is about Lincoln Jefferson, a black Iraq War veteran seeking justice for the shooting death of his teenage son by a white police officer. It co-stars Omari Hardwick, Theo Rossi and Beau Knapp. In the film Jefferson takes a police station hostage and puts the officer on trial, using inmates as the jury.
The Venice Film Festival opens Aug. 28.