The film opens with Fred Hampton giving an inspiring speech to his rainbow coalition calling for a revolution at the polls in November.

There are even white people in the audience holding bibles, so you know he’s charismatic if he can get through to Republicans. A redneck mother nods her head along with Fred's words and and wipes a tear from her eye. She then hugs a young black man next to her, symbolizing racial healing.

At first, Fred is suspicious of cops, until one day an FBI agent saves his life from a racist Republican would-be assassin. At the next political rally, Fred asks the audience to give a round of applause for the FBI, who are providing security for the event.

One day Fred is tragically slain by a bad apple in the Chicago PD during a routine traffic stop in his bedroom. When Hoover gets the phone call, he is heartbroken and personally apologizes to Fred’s family for his agency not being there to protect him. Everyone heals and agrees that the real hero is our democratic institutions.

To commemorate Fred’s legacy, the FBI director and local community leaders come together to establish The J. Edgar Hoover Institute for Civil Rights, which gives thousands of dollars in scholarships every year to black youths who start successful businesses in disadvantaged communities for more than two years.

    • Saint [he/him]
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      edit-2
      4 years ago

      Also a spunky female Klan member who impresses Hampton with her intellectual honesty and debate ability, and bonds with him over their shared love of baseball, so he hires her as policy advisor for the Panthers

      • purr [undecided]
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        edit-2
        4 years ago

        theres a scene where a black woman with the panthers is calling out the panthers on being sexist and the spunky blonde republican is speaks up about how emphasizing equal rights for women is reductive and is praised for being a true revolutionary woman by hampton, theres also a subtle nod (via the black woman getting extremely angry for seemingly no reason) to the spunky republican white woman being hotter than the revolutionary black woman and whatever ounce of sanity i have explodes

        this is all done via walk and talk

        later when freddie and ainsley --i mean the white spunky blonde republican girl-- are laying in bed they have a cute bit where they throw around the racial phrases theyve had hurled at them in the past, in a meet cute rapid sorkin coversational overlap style. freddie goes "people call me the n word" and republican girl goes "sometimes black women call me barbie" and they kiss

        "youre more than a barbie to me"

      • Judge_Juche [she/her]
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        4 years ago

        Her name is actually Annabelle but everyone calls her 'Peter' for some reason

    • zifnab25 [he/him, any]
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      edit-2
      4 years ago

      you need a far left black panther character who is “just as bad” as the klansmen

      Literally just William O'Neal. You do the whole story, but O'Neal is actually the leftist radical who doesn't think Hampton went far enough and Hampton is just trying to teach his neighbors to do black capitalism and reach across the aisle to form bipartisan compromise.

  • happybadger [he/him]
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    4 years ago

    Fred Hampton's girlfriend trips on three separate objects and at one point he sits her down like a child and explains black people to her because Sorkin did a bunch of coke and googled "what are black people" the night before the screenplay was due.

  • hexaflexagonbear [he/him]
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    4 years ago

    There are even white people in the audience holding bibles, so you know he’s charismatic if he can get through to Republicans.

    Let's face it, in an Aaron Sorkin movie Fred Hampton would he the only black guy, and they'd talk about how articulate he is before a white guy has to explain black liberation to him.

  • zifnab25 [he/him, any]
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    edit-2
    4 years ago

    The film opens with Fred Hampton giving an inspiring speech an annoying walk-and-talk to his rainbow coalition calling for a revolution bipartisan compromise at the polls in November.

    There are even only white people in the audience holding bibles, so you know he’s charismatic if he can get through to Republicans. A redneck mother blonde cover-girl wearing a Nixon themed flag-lapel pin nods her head along with Fred’s words and and wipes a tear from her eye. She then hugs a young black man next to her, symbolizing racial healing that they're definitely boning.

    At first, Fred is suspicious of cops, until one day an FBI agent saves his life from a racist Republican Puerto Rican Marxist would-be assassin. At the next political rally, Fred asks the audience to give a round of applause for the FBI, who are providing security for the event.

    One day Fred is tragically slain by a bad apple in the Chicago PD disgruntled Black Panther Leftist Radical during a routine traffic stop alcoholic bender in his bedroom. When Hoover gets the phone call, he is heartbroken and personally apologizes to Fred’s family for his agency not being there to protect him. Everyone heals and agrees that the real hero is our democratic institutions.

    To commemorate Fred’s legacy, the FBI director and local community leaders come together to establish The J. Edgar Hoover Institute for Civil Rights, which gives thousands of dollars in scholarships every year to black youths who start successful businesses in disadvantaged communities for more than two years.

    The movie closes with a quote from Bill Clinton