By Patrick Cremona

Published: Thursday, 05 January 2023 at 12:00 am


**Warning: This article discusses Emmett Till, whose story some readers may find distressing**

The story of Emmett Till – the 14-year-old boy who was brutally lynched in Mississippi in 1955 – is a shocking and tragic one, but it is told with real sensitivity in Till, the new film from acclaimed director Chinonye Chukwu which arrives in UK cinemas this week.

As many viewers will already know, Emmett was a Chicago-born teenager who had been staying with his cousins in the Mississippi Delta region when he was accused of flirting with a married white clerk at a local grocery store – a violation of the racist Jim Crow laws that were still in place in several southern states at the time.

A few nights later, he was abducted from his great-uncle’s house by the clerk’s husband and his half-brother – Roy Bryant and JW Milam – who proceeded to beat and mutilate him before shooting him in the head and leaving his body in the Tallahatchie River, where his remains were found three days later.

Although Till opens by showing Emmett’s life prior to this horrific incident, it primarily tells the story of the events that happened after his murder – focusing on his mother Mamie’s long fight for justice and her journey to becoming a prominent activist in the Civil Rights Movement.

As Chukwu makes clear in her director’s statement, this decision to tell the story from Mamie’s viewpoint – championing her legacy and centering her in the spotlight – was vital when it came to making the film, and speaking exclusively to RadioTimes.com she outlined the extensive research process she undertook when it came to adapting her true story.

“There was so much about Mamie I didn’t know, and I think that there’s so much about Mamie that most of us in the world don’t know,” she said.

“I think a lot of people only know about the physical violence that was inflicted on Emmett – but that’s not the story. And that certainly shouldn’t be all that people take away from Mamie’s story and Emmett’s humanity and Mamie’s humanity.”