On Monday (January 25), Oscar-winning filmmaker Barry Jenkins dropped the trailer for his new series Underground Railroad.Â
The series is an adaptation of Colson Whiteheadâs Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Underground Railroad published in 2016.Â
The novel is based on the true story of the web of networks that aided the escape of enslaved African people in the South. Jenkinsâ show will be released exclusively on Amazon Prime Video.Â
The new, one-minute trailer gave fans a brief peak into the world Jenkins is creating on the screen. The trailer, entitled âIn Aeternumâ which means âforeverâ in Latin, plays in reverse.Â
According to IndieWire, who interviewed Jenkins, composer Nicholas Britell was tapped for the project. Britell also led composition on the soundtracks for Jenkins' Moonlight and If Beale Street Could Talk.
âI said to Nick, is there a way to compose with chords that have the same feelings, same energy, the same power in reverse as they do play forwards,â Jenkins said to the outlet.Â
The seriesâ main character âCora Randallâ is played by budding actress Thusa Mbedu. Fans who havenât read the book might not be sure whatâs going on in the brief trailers, but Jenkins says thereâll be much more to uncover in the show.Â
âIâve been trying to figure out how to describe the show, and I think you canât describe all of it in one, because from state to state, the tone of the show and the journey shift... Itâs almost as though Cora is manifesting each new world sheâs entering.âÂ
Some potential backlash Jenkins might face is the beautification of the horrors of slavery in America, but the director says that perspective is narrow:Â
âIn the question, we assume that slaves did not know what love felt like, they did not know what community felt like, they did not know what joy felt like, and I think when you do that, you sort of rob them of their subconscious, which I think had to be robust, and likely was even more robust than ours to endure such physical degradation, and yet still preserve enough joy, love, family, community, that you and I could exist.âÂ
There is some imagery, though, the director warned, that is âquite barbaric.â
âThere are people saying âOh, thereâs another project about slaveryâ, but I think when you say that, we sort of reduce the humanity of the people who were enslaved, and we assume that the condition of slavery reduced these people to one experience.âÂ
Those who want to watch the show can expect it to come out sometime this year.Â
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