12 Years a Slave
12 Years a Slave Steve McQueen’s 12 Years a Slave is not made to be watched comfortably. It is made to be endured. It is cinema that refuses the anesthetic pleasures of distance, metaphor, or heroic abstraction. From its opening frames, McQueen makes a pact with the audience that he will not soften the blow, will not provide release through sentimentality, will not let us hide behind craft. The film is less a narrative than a sustained moral exposure. You don’t “learn” about slavery here—you are made to sit inside it, minute by minute, breath by breath, until time itself becomes an instrument of punishment. McQueen comes to this film not as a storyteller looking for arcs and resolutions, but as a visual artist obsessed with duration, with bodies in space, with what happens when suffering is allowed to continue past the point where cinema usually cuts away. His background bleeds into every choice. He understands that the true obscenity of slavery was not only the ...