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Film Features Film/TV

Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga

When Praetorian Jack (Tom Burke) sizes up Furiosa (Anya Taylor-Joy) for the first time, she’s standing alone in the middle of the wasteland, bloodied and bruised. They are the only two survivors of a brutal desert battle which has left the road behind them littered with twisted steel and broken bodies. Furiosa has “a purposeful savagery” which makes her an ideal candidate for promotion to Imperator in the army of Immortan Joe (Lachy Hulme). Jack offers to take her under his wing  — she’s just killed most of his crew, so he needs the help driving the War Rig. 

By the time she gets her field promotion, Furiosa has already lived four lives. She was a carefree youth, privileged to live in The Green Place, a matriarchal society that retained a high level of technology in a sheltered secret valley. At age ten (Alaya Browne plays Youngest Furiosa), she is taken captive by raiders from the Biker Horde of Dementus (Chris Hemsworth), and forced to live in a cage as his “daughter.” When Dementus makes a play for Wasteland dominance by taking on Immortan Joe, Furiosa is traded, along with a doctor (Angus Sampson) as part of an armistice deal. She is sent to the vault where Immortan keeps his harem, where she first shaves her head as part of an elaborate escape plan. With sons like Rictus Errectus (Nathan Jones) and his slightly brighter brother, Scrotus (Josh Helman), it’s easy to see why Immortan Joe would need Furiosa, who is always the smartest person in the room, to breed future “Warlord Jr’s.” Furiosa escapes the rape chamber to live for a while disguised as a War Boy while she bides her time, and plots her ultimate escape back to the Green Place. 

Immortan Joe (Lachy Hulme) and his minons. (Courtesy Warner Bros.)

We first met Furiosa in 2015’s Mad Max: Fury Road, where she staged a high-octane escape from the Immortal Man’s Citadel, and took his five perfect wives with her. It was the fourth installment in director George Miller’s Mad Max series, which began as gonzo Australian Oz-sploitation in 1979 and broke into the American popular imagination in 1981 with The Road Warrior. Max, a former Aussie highway patrolman turned wasteland legend, was played in the first three films by Mel Gibson, then by Tom Hardy in Fury Road. Even though his name was in the title, Hardy’s Max was utterly upstaged in Fury Road by Charlize Theron’s Furiosa. Her indelible performance elevated the film from one of the best action films ever made to one of the best films ever made, period. 

Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga began life as an anime series intended to accompany Fury Road if it had been made as planned in the mid-’00s. Furiosa retains the episodic structure, with cards announcing chapter titles. It is framed as the remembrance of The History Man (George Shevtsov), who shared Dementus’ cage with Furiosa. Miller has said the Mad Max films are folk legends of the future told by those who are trying to rebuild human society after the combination of ecological collapse and nuclear war have laid waste to the planet. Fury Road is told in close-up, zoomed in on three hard days in the wasteland. Furiosa begins with a zoom in from space onto the Australian outback, signaling that Miller is working in a different register. The intricate chase scenes, which Miller does better than anyone ever has, still pop. “Chapter 3: Stowaway”, which reportedly took five years to plan and six months to film, rises to Fury Road’s heights. 

Chris Hemsworth as Dementus (Courtesy Warner Bros.)

But Miller is more concerned with the people in the wasteland. Fury Road bore the mark of silent stunt genius Buster Keaton. Furiosa’s Bildungsroman, the story of how the child became the woman, and the woman became the hero, is in the mode of an Akira Kurosawa samurai epic. That’s why the 15-year story’s climax, the 40 Day Wasteland War, takes place largely off screen. Furiosa both starts the war and finishes it. The piles of burning corpses tell you everything to you need to know about what happened in between. 

To hear Dementus tell it, Furiosa’s problem is that she has hope. She saw the Green Place. She knows life doesn’t have to be a brutal scramble for survival, where your first instinct is to loot your buddy’s corpse. Hemsworth is deliciously unhinged on the surface, but he is, like Hamlet, “mad in craft.” At least at first. As the years go by, the level of brutality needed to control a hoard of cannibalistic bikers starts to take its toll. This is by far the best performance of Hemsworth’s career. 

He almost, but not quite, upstages the Furiosas. Anya Taylor-Joy has the unenviable assignment of following a titan like Charlize Theron. Fortunately, she has help from Alyla Browne, a 14-year-old newcomer who is completely at home chewing through a motorcycle fuel line. As the traumas pile up, and the flamethrowers roar, she slowly comes into focus. Will she be a monster, like Dementus, or a protector, like her mother? Then, in one epic moment on the top of a speeding war rig, Taylor-Joy looks into the camera, and there she is, our Furiosa, ready to fight the whole rotten world. 

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News News Blog News Feature

Housing Complaint Filed on Behalf of HCV Residents in Memphis

Multiple entities have joined together to file an official complaint against a tenant screening software for its alleged treatment of potential renters in Memphis.

The National Fair Housing Alliance (NFHA), the Fair Housing Rights Center in Southeastern Pennsylvania (FHRC), and the Housing Equality Center of Pennsylvania (HECP) filed a complaint on behalf of residents in both Memphis and Pennsylvania against Tenant Turner Inc. 

Tenant Turner is a “web lead management and tenant screening software” which displays listings and can be used by management to screen potential residents. 

“[The] complaint alleges that Tenant Turner discriminates based on race by facilitating landlords to generate listings on its website that display a refusal to rent to people who use Housing Choice Vouchers (HCV) and designing an algorithm that prohibits voucher holders from scheduling a viewing of rental units that display that refusal in cities of Memphis, TN, and Philadelphia, PA,” the organizations said in a statement.

HCVs provide low-income citizens with affordable housing options, are provided by the federal government, and are available through places like the Memphis Housing Authority (MHA).

“There is an enormous shortage of decent, affordable rental properties in Memphis and Shelby County,” MHA said in a statement. “Adding your property to the HCV program is one of the easiest ways to ensure you have a tenant paying rent — and part of the rent comes from MHA.”

According to the complaint, Tenant Turner allows landlords to choose whether they want to rent to people using HCV vouchers, even if the city has policies in place that prohibit discrimination on this basis.

“Through over 40 tests of Tenant Turner’s pre-screening survey that sets up showings of rental units on listing that display housing choice voucher restrictions, NFHA, FHRC, and HECP found that testers with housing vouchers were unable to schedule a viewing of the rental unit,” the organizations said.

They went on to say that research showed more than 4,005 listings were found with these restrictions, even though both Memphis and Philadelphia have “source of income protections.”

Information provided by the housing authorities show that both cities are “over-represented in the households participating in the HCV program.” In Memphis, 96 percent of households receiving these vouchers are Black, with only one percent of renters being white. They added that 69 percent of renters in the city are Black, and 20.6 percent are white.

“Rising rents are putting housing out of reach for millions, particularly people of color, persons living with disabilities, low- and moderate-income families, veterans, and frontline workers who have been hardest-hit by the ongoing Covid-19 health and economic crisis,” Lisa Rice, NFHA’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “More protections are needed for renters who rely on housing vouchers, and everyone, including government, must utilize their powers to prevent the unfair practice of discrimination against those who use the vital HCV program.”

Tenant Turner has not responded to a request for comment.

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On the Fly We Recommend We Recommend

On the Fly: Week of 5/24/24

“MANE” and “Hidden Gems” Opening Reception
Crosstown Arts
Friday, May 24, 6 p.m.
Crosstown Arts presents an opening reception for “MANE” and “Hidden Gems” curated by Najee Strickland and Kiara Sally in the Galleries at Crosstown Arts. “MANE” will explore how Southern speech has shaped Memphis artists’ view of community and themselves while “Hidden Gems” includes artists with modest visibility and offers them an opportunity to show up and be uncovered. The opening will feature a performance from Keeping It P, a special menu by Chef Bo Zou of Petals of a Peony, and more. The event is free and open to the public

BrewHaHa: A Night of Comedy
Hampline Brewing Company
Friday, May 24, 7:30 p.m.
Keeley Allison hosts a free night of laughs with a lineup of local comedians: headliner Rob Love, then Ryan Bush, and Ben Pierce. 

Cooper-York Fest
Memphis Made Brewing Co.
Saturday, May 25, 1 p.m.
Cooper-York Fest returns this spring with tons of beer, vendors, face painting, and more. Emporio’s Table and Emo Flamingo food trucks will be there, and Owlbear, Kitty Dearing & the Dagnabbits, and San Salida will provide the music. 

Harbert Avenue Porch Show: Pinky’s and Tyler Keith & the Apostles
1858 Harbert 
Saturday, May 25, 5-8 p.m.
Music begins at 5:30 p.m. with Pinky’s followed by Tyler Keith & the Apostles at 6:15 p.m. Let’s Be Frank! food truck will be on the street an hour before the music starts.  Beer is provided by Memphis Made Brewing. T-shirts designed by Mike McCarthy will be sold at the event and in the Black & Wyatt Web Store with all profits going to the bands. There is no charge for the event, but donations to the bands will be accepted and are appreciated.

Shroomlicious Vegan Cookout
394 N. Watkins
Monday, May 27, 12 p.m.
Calling all fungi, fungals, and funpals! Shroomlicious Meals is hosting its first-ever cookout this Memorial Day with meals all centered around the mushroom. That means each plate ($20) will be packed with grilled mushrooms, tasty sides, and mouthwatering sauces that’ll have you coming back for seconds (and thirds)! RSVP now and read Michael Donahue’s story on the vegan eatery before you go.

Nature Journaling at Overton Park
Overton Park
Tuesday, May 28, 4 p.m.
Join Overton Park Conservancy at the East Parkway Old Forest gateway to learn the basics of nature journaling. Bring your own notebook and writing materials, and there will be limited art supplies to share. This program is free and no RSVP is required.

Whet Thursday
Metal Museum
May 30, 5-8 p.m.
The Metal Museum’s Whet Thursdays are back! That means the last Thursday of the month from May to August you can enjoy live demonstrations by skilled blacksmiths, free admission to the galleries, and more. This Whet Thursday, Corey Lou & DaVillage will bring Memphis Soul music Smurfey’s Smokehouse will be the featured food truck with the Tipsy Tumbler serving up the beverages.

Megan Thee Stallion: Hot Girl Summer Tour
FedExForum
Thursday, May 30, 8 p.m.
Every summer is hot girl summer, but we’re talking about capital Hot Girl Summer from Megan Thee Stallion as she brings her Hot Girl Summer Tour to Memphis with special guest Memphis’ own GloRilla. Tickets start at $51, but it’s Megan Thee Stallion and GloRilla, so get on it. 

There’s always something happening in Memphis. See a full calendar of events here.

Submit events here or by emailing calendar@memphisflyer.com.

Categories
Music Music Blog

Mempho Festival 2024 Reveals Lineup

The Mempho Music Festival, scheduled for October 4-6, has announced the performers to be featured this year, and it makes it clear once again why Billboard Magazine called it “one of the premiere southeast music festivals for Americana, rock, and blues music.” And with Queens of the Stone Age topping the bill, Mempho is certainly bringing serious rock bona-fides to the Mid South.

Mempho’s commitment to the jam band sound, well-established with its history of bringing Widespread Panic to Memphis multiple times, also continues unabated, with Trey Anastasio also headlining. As the lead guitarist and songwriter for Phish, the jam band star will be continuing the approach started this month in touring with his “classic” Trey Anastasio Band (TAB), composed of drummer Russ Lawton, keyboardist Ray Paczkowski, and bassist Dezron Douglas.

Finally, the outlaw county element will be well represented by Cody Jinks, the onetime thrash rocker from Texas who’s been making waves on the country charts for nearly a decade.

Mempho’s eclecticism goes far beyond those genres, as the next tier of talent slated to appear this year reveals. If snagging the Fugees for Mempho Presents’ recent RiverBeat Music Festival was impressive, so too is the appearance of both The Roots and Digable Planets at Mempho Fest this fall. And beyond those eternally fresh Philly favorites, the list also includes Goose, Sublime with Rome, Marcus King, Charles Wesley Godwin, Drew Holcomb and The Neighbors, Cory Wong, Warren Haynes Band, and The Kills. Other artists will fill in the roster as well, including some of this city’s finest artists. Once again, ground zero for the multi-stage festival will be Radians Amphitheater at the Memphis Botanic Garden.

Three day tickets to the Mempho Music Festival are now available and can be purchased through memphofest.com/tickets. Single-Day tickets will be made available soon with the announcement of the daily lineup.

Categories
News News Blog News Feature

MSCS Teachers Will Not Be Allowed To Carry Handguns

Memphis-Shelby County School (MSCS) teachers will not be allowed to carry handguns or weapons in school.

This announcement comes from the district, a month after the Tennessee legislature passed a law that allows school faculty and staff to carry weapons on campus “subject to certain conditions.” Gov. Bill Lee signed the bill into law on April 26.

The “united decision” for MSCS to not allow staff to carry weapons was made by superintendent Marie N. Feagins along with Shelby County sheriff Floyd Bonner and interim Memphis police chief Cerelyn (C.J.) Davis.

“On behalf of Memphis-Shelby County Schools, I want to thank Chief Davis and Sheriff Bonner for their ongoing partnership and support in keeping our students and families safe. Thank you also to the community for your commitment and collaboration in moving Memphis forward together,” Feagins said in a statement.

According to the district, a resolution was passed days after the announcement, which prohibited employees from carrying firearms on school grounds.

“The Board does not believe that arming school staff is the most effective approach for Memphis-Shelby County Schools. That is the expectation of the Board that school staff serve first and foremost as trained, focused, and dedicated educators, not law enforcement and/or security officers,” the resolution said.

They added this was not an “effective” solution for the district.

Feagins, Davis, and Bonner continue to emphasize that “firearms have no place in classrooms,” and they are “united on this issue.”

“Schools are for learning, and emergency situations should be handled by trained officers,” Bonner said.”

This controversial law went into effect in the aftermath of the Covenant School to address safety concerns in schools statewide.

Categories
News Politics Politics Beat Blog

Cohen Introduces Resolution Censuring Alito

More than a few flutters of reaction have resulted from recent news of Supreme Court Associate Justice Samuel Alito’s  having flown an upside-down American flag at his residence in apparent support of the January 6, 2021 insurrection at the nation’s Capitol.

And if Memphis Congressman Steve Cohen has his way, a truly stiff wind could be blowing Alito’s way via an official congressional reprimand.

Cohen has introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives a resolution of censure, charging  the arch-conservative Alito with bias, improper political activity, and a “breach of judicial ethics” for flying the upside-down flag, widely recognized as a symbol of the pro-Trump “Stop the Steal” movement, in the aftermath of the insurrection.

The resolution would censure Alito “for knowingly violating the federal recusal statute and binding ethics standards and calling the impartiality of the Supreme Court of the United States into question by continuing to participate in cases in which his prior public conduct could be reasonably interpreted to demonstrate bias.” It also demands that Alito  recuse himself from all litigation related to the 2020 election or the January insurrection.

Accusing Justice Alito of “poor judgment,” Cohen, a member of the house Judiciary Committee, said, “There must be accountability to protect the integrity and impartiality of the High Court. We must protect the Constitutional rights to fair and impartial proceedings.”

Responding to the high volume of criticism he has received, Alito has attempted to blame his wife for flying the upside-down flag in reaction to a neighbor’s yard signs criticizing the justice.

Among the many favorable reactions to the Cohen resolution was this one from Alex Aronson, executive director of  Court Accountability: “We commend Representative Cohen for introducing this resolution censuring Justice Alito and calling for his recusal. It is good to see members of the House Judiciary Committee taking a leadership role in holding out-of-control Supreme Court justices accountable, and this resolution is an excellent first step.”

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News The Fly-By

MEMernet: Memphis in May, SmokeSlam, and News You Can Use

Memphis on the internet.

Memphis in May

The Shed BBQ from Ocean Springs, Mississippi, took home top honors at Memphis in May’s World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest last weekend. Teams also took wins in contests away from the smokers, like Miss Piggy Idol and barbecue sauce wrestling matches (above).

SmokeSlam

Posted to Facebook by SmokeSlam

Smokemasters BBQ took SmokeSlam’s top prize during its inaugural contest. Music, fireworks, a Ferris wheel, and more entertained the crowds at Tom Lee Park, like rapper Tone Loc (above).

News You Can Use

Posted to kontji.com

Kontji Anthony wants to help you find a job. Among the many resources you’ll find at her website, kontji.com, is a massive list of Memphis-area jobs updated each week. The current list includes an airport shuttle driver, lawn care specialist, a tour guide, stylist, lots of jobs at Bass Pro and Graceland, and tons more. Let’s get to work, y’all!

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Art Art Feature We Recommend We Recommend

AAPI Heritage Month Memphis’ ‘Between Heaven and Earth’

When SunAh Laybourn founded Asian American & Pacific Islander (AAPI) Heritage Month Memphis in 2023, she knew an art show would always be a part of the annual activities. After all, the 2022 removal, and eventual reinstallation, of photographer Tommy Kha’s Elvis-inspired portrait in the Memphis International Airport was just one of the events that got the University of Memphis professor thinking about Asian-American representation, and, sadly, anti-Asian hate, in Memphis.

For that first AAPI Heritage Month art show, Laybourn chose the title “Asian American in the South.” “That approach for me last year,” she says, “was really just making the statement that Asian Americans are in the shadows, but we’re part of the South, and so I love to be able to see all of the creativity from all the artists. It was really a lot about identity-making.”

This year’s show — “Between Heaven and Earth, We Build Our Home” — is an expansion of that. “The theme of the exhibition is about family and home and ancestry, kind of like how we communicate and pass down knowledge and wisdom and lessons from generation to generation,” says Neena Wang, the show’s curator. “The theme really just came out of the pieces that I [was sent]. Everybody was sending in work about family, about their relatives, about ancestry.”

Participating are Thandi Cai, Sai Clayton, Sharon Havelka, Vivian Havelka, John Lee, Christine Yerie Lee, Huifu Ma, Susan Mah, Lili Nacht, Yangbin Park, Neena Wang, and Yidan Zeng. All are AAPI individuals from Memphis or living in the South, whose art showcases a variety of media, including painting, sculpture, textile, photography, video, and performance.

Wang and Laybourn also point out that “Between Heaven and Earth” marks UrbanArt Commission’s first show by an outside organization. “I think what’s great about having this partnership with UrbanArt is that the show will be on view for a few weeks [through June 19th],” Laybourn says. “Last year was just one night only.”

“Between Heaven and Earth” opens on Saturday, May 25th, with a reception featuring a special performance by the MengCheng Collective (Cai, Nacht, Wang, and Zeng). Nacht and Zeng will also lead a free Raise Your Flag workshop on Sunday, May 26th, 2 to 5 p.m. “They’re going to do a cyanotype flag-making workshop,” Wang says. “The idea is making a flag as a representation of place because the theme of the show is very much about building your own place as an immigrant or as an outsider.” Participants can register in advance at bit.ly/mcraiseflag.

For more information on AAPI Heritage Month Memphis, presented by Google, visit aapiheritagemonthmemphis.com.

“Between Heaven and Earth, We Build Our Home” Opening reception, UrbanArt Commission, 422 North Cleveland, Saturday, May 25, 4-8 p.m.

Categories
Politics Politics Feature

A Funding Perplex

Anyone who has been paying attention to hot-button issues in law enforcement is aware that the matter of incarcerated inmates with mental illnesses is one of them — and one of the most complex as well.

Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris’ ongoing proposal to build an expansive new facility to house and treat those prisoners is one response — and the mayor has come in for much praise for it, especially since he intends to proceed without asking for a tax increase, by accessing federal ARPA (American Rescue Plan Act) funds received by the county at the height of the Covid epidemic.

And Sheriff Floyd Bonner had indicated lately that he was on the verge of issuing an RFP (request for proposal) to local medical facilities for establishing an inpatient treatment program for the most severely impaired, those inmates who have been formally adjudged by the courts to be incompetent to stand trial.

It is such inmates, languishing in jail as a de facto permanent population, who have been the source of numerous disturbances and highly publicized unsanitary behavior noted by the news media and would-be reformers alike. And they are a primary reason for Bonner’s recent decision to back away from supervising youthful offenders to focus on hard-core issues among adult offenders.

As it happens, Bonner is the custodian not only of such issues but of some $2.7 million in allocated and unspent funds for dealing with them, and in testimony last week at the county commission’s committee sessions had floated the idea of the aforementioned RFP.

That money, largely derived from a settlement from drug companies and manufacturers involved in the proliferation of opioids, was set aside by the county as a replacement of sorts for a similar sum originally budgeted in 2022 at the behest of former County Commissioner Van Turner for treatment of those inmates deemed incompetent to stand trial by reason of their impairment.

Much of that original outlay ended up, however, being routed into the coffers of the county’s specialty courts (tribunals focused on drugs, veterans, and, in the most general sense, those with mental health conditions). Some of it was destined for CAAP (Cocaine and Alcohol Awareness Program), where it could be put to useful ends, but not for the original purpose of inpatient treatment of the most seriously incapacitated inmates.

Meanwhile County Commissioner Erika Sugarmon sponsored a resolution that became a core part of the agenda at this commission’s regular public meeting Monday night. She apparently proposed routing another $500,000 to CAAP from the currently available funding stock of $2,700,000.

David Upton, a spokesperson for the original funding plan, which envisioned an inpatient program, made an impassioned plea to retain the $500,000 in the sheriff’s budget.

At one point in the commission’s discussion of the resolution, Commissioner Mick Wright allowed as how he was doing his best to comprehend the overriding issue but was having trouble understanding what funds were available and for what purpose.

He doubtless spoke for many who had difficulty following the money and the competing claimants for it. Ultimately the commission deferred voting on the resolution and will try to unravel the complications of the matter at its next meeting.

To be continued.

Categories
Film/TV TV Features

Stax: Soulsville U.S.A.

Jamila Wignot was nervous. It was Friday night, May 17, 2024, at Crosstown Theater in Midtown Memphis, and she was about to premiere the first episode of her latest HBO documentary series Stax: Soulsville U.S.A. to a hometown crowd. The sold-out house was full of Memphis music royalty: David Porter, Al Bell, Deanie Parker, Eddie Floyd, the list goes on.

“It’s like somebody was just saying to me, ‘Didn’t Janis Joplin get booed in Memphis?’ And I was like, ‘Exactly!’ That’s why I was nervous,” Wignot says on a Zoom interview a few days later.

Turns out, she needn’t have worried. The crowd responded to “Chapter One: ’Cause I Love You” with a Cannes-level standing ovation. During the Q&A after the screening, Deanie Parker, the Stax Museum of American Soul Music’s first CEO, seemed taken aback. “This really has been an emotional experience for me,” she says. “I think it’s because, while we achieved a lot, we did it in about a decade — which is astounding! We made a mark globally.”

Booker T. Jones, Donald “Duck” Dunn, David Porter, Al Jackson Jr., Bonnie Bramlett, Delaney Bramlett, Isaac Hayes, and Steve Cropper (Photo: Courtesy Don Nix 
Collection/OKPOP)

Wignot says her involvement with the Stax story started as she was finishing up her last documentary, a portrait of modern dance pioneer Alvin Ailey. “I’ve been working in documentary filmmaking, particularly historical documentary filmmaking, for a long time. But I came out of a kind of PBS model of documentaries that were narrated by a kind of ‘Voice of God’ narrator. They used archival [film and stills], but there were very specific ways that you had to use it at that time. With Ailey, I finally got to do the kind of documentary filmmaking that I like to do, which is first-person, kind of witness-driven documentary filmmaking. As a kid, I saw Eyes on the Prize and thought, ‘Wow, this is amazing!’ When you are hearing from somebody who was there on the front lines, and then you’re seeing them in the archival footage, it all just feels very immersive and alive and urgent.

“On the heels of that, I was then approached first by Ezra Edelman and Caroline Waterlow who made O.J.: Made in America. We’d all been friends for a very long time. Ezra said, ‘I’m working with this company, White Horse Pictures, and we’re looking for somebody who wants to direct a series on Stax Records, and do you think you’d be into it?’ And I was just immediately like, ‘Yes, yes, yes!’”

Bruce Talamon and Isaac Hayes at the 1972 Wattstax concert (Photo: Howard Bingham)

Stax: Soulsville U.S.A. skillfully blends interviews with the surviving players and extensively researched archival footage from the label’s heyday. “I don’t bother to interview RZA, who’s a diehard fan of the label. There’s no Justin Timberlake, there’s no Elton John, there’s no Paul McCartney. I was not interested in having the kind of secondary fan in there, just appreciating it. I wanted to understand how the label came together, the experiences of the people on the ground, and then let the music do the work of generating enthusiasm.”

The story is one of triumphant highs, stunning reversals of fortune, and missed opportunities, such as the time The Beatles tried and failed to schedule a recording session at the Stax studio on McLemore Avenue. (“Had that happened, for sure Ringo and Paul would’ve been up in this documentary!” says Wignot.)

Wignot’s approach is immediate and visceral. In one priceless take, shot in Booker T. Jones’ Nevada home, the Stax organist and arranger walks us through the creation of the timeless instrumental “Green Onions,” explaining how the song works from a music theory standpoint. It’s a little like watching Albert Einstein sketch out the equations for general relativity on a cocktail napkin.

“The thing that’s so incredible about Booker T. Jones is, he’s quite a quiet guy. Put him in front of a crowd and he’s like, ‘I’m ready!’ But then put him in a more intimate setting, and that’s not his milieu, which I love about performers. So he walked in and he said, ‘Oh, I’m feeling a little bit nervous and shy.’ He looked amazing, that blue suit and the hat, everything styled to perfection. And he said, ‘I’m going to sit at the piano and just start playing. It helps me settle down.’ As we were finishing up our setup, Booker T. Jones — Booker T. Jones! — is giving us a private concert. You’re trying to act like it’s very normal and not to go full fan-girl on him, just like, ‘How is this happening?’ The cameraman is like, ‘The light’s going to go here?’ And we’re like, ‘The guy is doing his thing RIGHT NOW.’

“Finally, I said, ‘[‘Green Onions’], it’s such a classic, that song. Since the process of working in Stax was so spontaneous, it could feel like things just kind of emerged out of nothing, give it to me. What’s the thought process? How do you get to this song?’ He was already at the piano, and he just started explaining it. It’s hands down one of my favorite scenes in the whole series. … Once you understand how ‘Green Onions’ came about, do you really need a famous person to talk about how much they love that song?”

The fact that Stax soul was chronically underappreciated by both the music industry and music press is a recurring theme in the series. In the intro, Parker promises to tell uncomfortable truths about how the powers-that-be never really wanted the company to succeed. The racial discrimination of the Jim Crow-era South is never far from the surface of the story, such as the time the label’s first breakout star, Carla Thomas, had to ride the service elevator to get to a meeting with the head of Atlantic Records.

It wasn’t until the Stax/Volt Revue toured Europe in the spring of 1967 that the Black musicians realized what it was like to be respected for their music, and not judged for the color of their skin. The segment of “’Cause I Love You” documenting the tour is powerful, says David Porter. “You could see a little bit of it, as an artist looking at the film, but to be there and to see that energy and that spirit was all over that space. There were people who were enjoying that music just breaking down and crying, getting tremendously emotional when they looked at Otis Redding, or Sam & Dave, or Eddie Floyd. It was something to see.”

Sam Moore acts as an informal narrator for the story of the tour, as you see his younger version hyping up a crowd of Norwegian teens. “There’s so many different films that have been able to make use of this material,” says Wignot. “Thank God it exists, but I was thinking, how do you take something that’s been often seen and give it a new life, a new kind of vitality? … When Sam Moore started talking about his love of the church, I wanted to get that in there, but not the way it is often told, up front. That’s the story of how R&B came together, in a way. It’s so central to what moves him as an artist. We have him talking about the power of the preacher to communicate. I just love in documentaries when you see somebody thinking. Then he says, ‘I would do anything to get that crowd to do a show with me.’ And that is so powerful because he’s not just trying to ‘turn them on.’ Even there, there’s a collective exchange, ‘Come with me, let’s do this together. …’

“The challenge of scenes like that, is how do you do it so that the music gets to live, so that we experience it as viewers as if we were there in the concert? But you’re adding just enough commentary that you’re not speaking on top of the scene, and you’re communicating what was going on emotionally for the performer. So there’s a real balance of too much dialogue versus too little dialogue, and understanding that the material is incredible in and of itself.”

“Chapter One” ends on the high note of the tour, says Wignot. “Episode one builds the way that ‘Try a Little Tenderness’ builds as a song. It was informed by Jim Stewart saying he thinks that that’s the song that best sums up the kind of spirit of Stax. It’s collaboration. It starts with one thing and then another thing gets laid on top and another. It just kind of builds over time and then becomes this big, explosive powerhouse climax of a song.”

“As you go forward with each of these segments, you’re gonna find that it is gonna get heavy. It’s gonna get fun, it’s gonna get powerful because it is alive,” says Porter. “The camaraderie that was between us, enjoying it, was shown in this film. It was a different time, and not a sweet time. We applauded what Jim [Stewart] was doing, giving us the freedom to go into the studio and do that. Everybody worked together in such a cohesive way, and there was a love and magic that happened in a continual way from day to day, hour to hour, all the way to the midnight hour. All that we would do, we’d have fun doing it. Because music is never good unless you can feel the joy inside of doing it.”

Stax: Soulsville U.S.A. is now streaming on Max.