
This photo shows U.S. actress Nina Mae McKinney and comes from the same session that produced two images we shared some years back. It was made in 1929 for the film Hallelujah, which happened to be the first sound movie directed by Hollywood legend King Vidor. Hallelujah is sometimes described as a “race film,” but it was actually meant for general audiences—a risky venture at the time, to say the least, for which Vidor had to put up his own money. There’s plenty of debate about his intentions in making the film and influence upon it. For our part, we’re more interested in the probability that McKinney was cinema’s first black femme fatale. Sure, she looks sweet as sugar here, but we’ve seen Hallelujah and she gets pretty evil in it. You can read a bit more here.


dissonance. A movie that is destroyed by its producer is not good—period—and moviegoing shouldn’t be a mercy fuck.



































