‘Sidney’ occasionally feels like an entry-level documentary aimed at familiarising the audience with his life and achievements. Here, there is a lack of space and time for Hudlin to dig deeper into the extensive impact of Poitier’s work. ‘Sidney’ is now showing on Apple TV+.


The Apple TV+ documentary Sidney is an ambitious attempt to summarise the extraordinary life, career and accomplishments of the legendary actor/filmmaker Sidney Poitier in less than two hours. Exploring Poitier’s journey from a premature baby born into a family of six children to his childhood in the Bahamas, early acting career in New York, and arrival in Hollywood, director Reginald Hudlin and producer Oprah Winfrey create a documentary that is a loving tribute to Poitier’s achievements. This is the first documentary about Sidney since his passing in January 2022 at the age of 94, and it is both a public memorial and a celebration of a career that challenged and changed Black representation on screen and social attitudes toward race.



Sidney has a straightforward premise, as it chronicles Poitier’s life, complemented by historical explorations that provide a fuller picture of what it meant to be Black in the United States during his career. The film does a great job of showcasing Poitier’s influence on the civil rights movement in the 1960s, featuring archive and contemporary interviews with Morgan Freeman, Denzel Washington, Spike Lee, Halle Berry, Oprah Winfrey, Lenny Kravitz, and Harry Belafonte.

Each interviewee reminisces about Poitier’s impact on them as young, aspiring artists and the social landscape surrounding them. Their insights put Poitier’s incredible achievements into perspective for a modern audience as we learn how he was, for the longest time, the only leading Black actor in Hollywood. Alongside this, Hudlin explores Poitier’s groundbreaking work from the first interracial kiss on screen with Katharine Houghton in Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner? (1967) to his famous slap of a white man in In the Heat of the Night (1968).



The film is at its strongest when Sidney Poitier speaks directly to the camera about his upbringing, childhood memories, and how he perceived his iconic status and role in promoting racial justice in mid-20th-century America. In these interviews conducted before his death in January, he discusses his life, achievements, and the injustices he faced with sincerity and passion, including the values he learned from his parents.

Even though the documentary is primarily a tribute to Poitier the actor, it does not shy away from exploring Poitier the family man, including his strengths and flaws, essentially bringing the icon closer to the audience. This is also emphasised by personal insights from his close family members and rare home movie footage.

Apart from the personal footage, there are plenty of signature scenes from his 1950s-60s boundary-pushing films, ensuring that viewers unfamiliar with his extensive work are provided with a jumping-off point that hopefully takes them straight to a streaming platform. However, given Poitier’s immense influence on cinema, Sidney occasionally feels like an entry-level documentary aimed at familiarising the audience with his life and achievements. Here, there is a lack of space and time for Hudlin to dig deeper into the extensive impact of Poitier’s work. While Sidney is a powerful statement about an extraordinary life, many lifelong admirers and fans will undoubtedly be left asking for more.



AILEY

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