How Steve McQueen’s Oscar-winning 12 Years a Slave made a statement by not giving viewers ‘the chance to look away’ upon its release 10 years ago

“At that point,” McQueen told The New York Times, “there was no going back.”

As a young man, McQueen’s father had worked as an orange picker in Florida, in the United States, surviving a racist attack that saw two of his associates murdered.

McQueen grew up in London, becoming an acclaimed artist, and his first films, Hunger (2008) and Shame (2011), dealt directly with different kinds of suffering and injustice.

McQueen on set during the making of “12 Years as a Slave”. Photo: courtesy of Fox Searchlight Pictures
Next, he and scriptwriter John Ridley wanted to tackle slavery, but didn’t know where to start. Then McQueen’s wife, the filmmaker Bianca Stigter, came upon Solomon Northup’s Twelve Years a Slave, a shocking 1853 memoir that the director likened to Anne Frank’s Diary of a Young Girl (1947), and they had their way in. Ridley, too, won an Oscar for his troubles.

Northup’s story is extraordinary – mostly because he lived to tell it – exposing the workings of the American slave trade from within.

In 1841, Northup (played in the film by British actor Chiwetel Ejiofor) was a free man living in Saratoga Springs, New York, with his wife, Anne (Kelsey Scott), and children, and making a living as a violinist.

McQueen and Brad Pitt with their Oscars for best picture for “12 Years a Slave” at the 2014 Academy Awards. Photo: Reuters
McQueen (centre) with producers (from left) Dede Gardner, Jeremy Kleiner, Anthony Katagas and Brad Pitt with their awards for best film for “12 Years a Slave” at the 2014 Baftas. Photo: AFP
While on a work trip to Washington, he was kidnapped, chained and sold into slavery in the Deep South, where he found himself at the mercy of a series of increasingly brutal masters (played by Benedict Cumberbatch, Paul Dano and Michael Fassbender).

Eventually, with the help of a sympathetic carpenter (Brad Pitt, who also co-produced), he contrived his own escape, although no one was ever convicted for their crimes against him.

Shooting took place on four former plantations near New Orleans in temperatures of more than 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).

I wanted to hold people to account, to say, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa, wait a minute – this happened here’

Steve McQueen

“It was brutal,” said McQueen, who recalled horses passing out and squadrons of mosquitoes, “but you realise how people had to live in those conditions.”

For Ejiofor, the locations helped him access the past. “To know that we were right there in the place where these things occurred was so powerful and emotional,” he told the Daily News. “That feeling of dancing with ghosts – it’s palpable.”

But 12 Years a Slave is not about ghosts. It’s about real pain endured by real people, something McQueen refuses to cut away from.

Benedict Cumberbatch and Chiwetel Ejiofor in a still from “12 Years a Slave”.

After Northup is kidnapped and renamed against his will, his captor calls him the “n” word, then beats him until his club breaks, continuing, afterwards, with a whip. This occurs almost straight to camera, with Ejiofor’s face foremost in the frame.

From here, Northup’s descent into hell is assured. It’s also punctuated by the suffering of others, as we see slaves torn away from their children, abused, assaulted and murdered.

But the harder it is to watch, the more McQueen makes us. In one scene, Northup is half-lynched by the out-of-control Tibeats (Dano), then left to hang for several awful minutes as plantation life goes on around him, the shot barely changing until he’s cut free.

Ejiofor and Michael Fassbender in a still from “12 Years a Slave”. Photo: Fox Searchlight Pictures

The most famous scene sees Patsey (Oscar-winner Lupita Nyong’o) whipped on the orders of her owner, and rapist, Epps (Fassbender).

Shot in just a few takes, with one camera, it’s an unforgettable scene, intimate and savage, with a furiously committed, career-making performance from Nyong’o.

“It was emotionally draining for everyone,” said cinematographer Sean Bobbitt, “but the idea was not to give the audience the chance to look away.” Instead, we’re forced to watch her agony up close, her face pressed tight to the corner of the screen, as her assailants swim in and out of focus behind.

Benedict Cumberbatch in a still from “12 Years a Slave”.

After these outrages, Northup seems to stare through the screen at us, as if to say, “How did you let this happen?” Eventually, he frees himself with the help of Bass (Pitt).

As far as anyone can tell, this really happened, but it still drew – ungrounded – accusations that the film was perpetuating the white saviour myth.

Ultimately Northup is saved by luck, his wits and his determination not to be broken.

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“Days ago I was with my family, in my home,” he says at the start. “Now you tell me all is lost. ‘Tell no one who I really am’ if I want to survive – I don’t want to survive, I want to live!”

Beautifully acted, with strong technical specs, the film is, if anything, more remarkable as a political statement than a work of drama.

Arriving in the middle of Barack Obama’s presidency, a time of comparative hope for the country, it felt like a call for white America to reckon with its crimes.
McQueen at the 2014 Baftas. Photo: Reuters

“There was a certain sense of non-responsibility, like it was something deep in the past,” said McQueen. “I wanted to hold people to account, to say, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa, wait a minute – this happened here.’”

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