Baptist News Global
Sections
  • News
  • Analysis
  • Opinion
  • Curated
  • Podcasts
    • Stuck in the Middle With You ↗
    • Madang with Grace Ji-Sun Kim ↗
    • Highest Power: Church + State ↗
    • Non-Disclosure: The Silenced Stories of Kanakuk Kamps Survivors ↗
    • Change-making Conversations ↗
  • Storytelling
    • Faith & Justice >
      • Charleston: Metanoia with Bill Stanfield
      • Charlotte: QC Family Tree with Greg and Helms Jarrell
      • Little Rock: Judge Wendell Griffen
      • North Carolina: Conetoe
    • Welcoming the Stranger >
      • Lost Boys of Sudan: St. John’s Baptist Charlotte
      • Awakening to Immigrant Justice: Myers Park Baptist Church
      • Hospitality on the corner: Gaston Christian Center
    • Signature Ministries >
      • Jake Hall: Gospel Gothic, Music and Radio
    • Singing Our Faith >
      • Hymns for a Lifetime: Ken Wilson and Knollwood Baptist Church
      • Norfolk Street Choir
    • Resilient Rural America >
      • Alabama: Perry County
      • Texas: Hidalgo County
      • Arkansas Delta
      • Southeast Kentucky
  • More
    • Contact
    • About
    • Donate
    • Associated Baptist Press Foundation
    • Planned Giving
    • Advertising
    • Ministry Jobs
    • Subscribe
    • Submissions and Permissions
Donate Subscribe
Search Search this site

Review: Killer of Sheep provides thoughtful contrast to summer blockbuster fare

NewsABPnews  |  June 25, 2007

(ABP) — With Spidey swinging across one screen and pirate Jack Sparrow swaggering across another, moviegoers searching for substance this summer have another option. Into the box-office bluster comes Killer of Sheep, a gentle — and thoughtfully moral — look at life in the troubled Watts section of Los Angeles three decades ago.

Directed by Charles Burnett, the movie focuses on one African-American family a few years after the infamous 1965 Watts riots. Burnett completed the movie in 1977 as his UCLA film school thesis, but problems with music rights prevented the film from theater releases until now.

In contrast to the contrived fictional situations of a standard Hollywood narrative, Killer of Sheep offers a “slice of life” — a term associated with the neo-realism movement born after World War II when moviemakers left the studio for real-world commentary.

In the movie, Stan (Henry Gayle Sanders), the family breadwinner, works at a slaughterhouse. The film's black-and-white, documentary-like scenes portray the ugliness of his work — meat packers in hardhats flay carcasses on meat hooks in rhythm to the blues of the movie's soundtrack.

In contrast with these moments, other scenes tenderly and humorously capture home and neighborhood life. Stan's little girl listens to a long-play album spinning precariously on a toy record player, singing along as she plays with dolls. Boys battle each other with rocks and make-do shields in the dust of a vacant lot or crawl one by one through a wall to pelt a nearby clothesline with dirt.

The dead-end packinghouse job that drains Stan and pays a survival wage leaves little energy for intimacy. As Stan dances cheek-to-cheek with his wife (Kaycee Moore) in the living room, the soulful lyrics of singer Dinah Washington echo his frustration: “This bitter earth/Well, what fruit it bears/What good is love/That no one shares?”

Despite the hardships, Stan steadfastly refuses the temptation to fill his pockets at the expense of his soul. Integrity and joy mix with life's wear and tear. The couple shares a close moment toward the end of the movie, but Stan's wife reminds him, “It's gonna rain. The roof still needs fixin'.”

Burnett said Stan survives on the strength of his moral character.

“He has a moral compass. He knows right from wrong,” he said in a question-and-answer session following a recent screening of the film.

The family man in Burnett's film “doesn't let these other … negative things come into his life and affect him,” the director later told Associated Baptist Press. “He hasn't quite reached the stage of Job” or the point of “enduring more than what he can bear.”

The director linked Stan's sense of morality to his Southern upbringing, calling attention to a moment in the film when Stan chides his son for using language sounding too “country.” Burnett sees Stan as trying to distance himself from his Southern background and in so doing “losing some important values.”

Art mimics life in the film, because Stan's Southern roots mirror Burnett's. Born in Vicksburg, Miss., Burnett moved to Los Angeles as a child, later considered working as an electrician, and then eventually studied film at UCLA. Burnett was baptized at a young age while visiting relatives back in Mississippi, where his uncle was a Baptist pastor and still preaches. The faith of his childhood is still a part of his life, Burnett said.

Other films by Burnett echo his faith roots. In his 1983 My Brother's Wedding, the main character's life is spared when he stays home to read the Bible to his grandparents instead of joining a friend who dies in an accident. In the 1990 To Sleep with Anger, traditional “folkways” conflict with orthodox Christian teaching, Burnett said.

Killer of Sheep, which Burnett made for under $10,000, contrasts not only today's big-budget blockbusters but the “blaxploitation” films of the 1970s.

Those movies show the underside of life, portraying “sort of an individualistic, materialistic ethos, as typified by the pimps and the drug-pushers and the call girls and the shysters in the street” said Frank Dobson, director of the Bishop Joseph Johnson Black Cultural Center at Vanderbilt University. Dobson conducted the discussion session at the Nashville screening of Killer of Sheep.

While individualism was one way to respond to the desperation of the black experience, Dobson said, Burnett offers another.

People like Stan are “struggling to keep the home and the family intact, as opposed to the blaxploitation film, which suggests that the way to counter and to deal with the racism is through materialism,” Dobson said.

“I'm touched by the way in which these people are trying to, as we say in the black church, make a way out of no way,” Dobson said. “They're faced by … this landscape of desperation and poverty and despair, and what they do every morning is, they get up and they do what they need to do to keep on keeping on, which I think is all about faith.”

Killer of Sheep is playing on limited screens this summer, with release on DVD scheduled for fall.

-30-

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • More
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Share on Telegram (Opens in new window) Telegram
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
Tags:Archives
More by
ABPnews
  • Get BNG headlines in your inbox

  • Check out our podcasts

     

     

    Stuck in the Middle
    With You

     

    Madang
    With Grace Ji-Sun Kim

     

     

    Highest Power
    Church+State

     

     

    Non-Disclosure:
    The Silenced Stories
    of Kanakuk Kamps Survivors

     

    Change-making
    Conversations

     

     

  • Politics • Faith • Resistance: by Greg Garrett

    BNG interview series on the state of faith, politics and resistance in our nation.

    See also Greg’s series on Politics, Faith and Mission

     

  • Featured

    • Islamophobia is the next bogeyman

      Opinion

    • The Black Church cannot remain America’s emergency moral infrastructure

      Opinion

    • We are manna

      Opinion

    • Webinar explores religious context of America’s Founders

      News


    Curated

    • Why Mary, as the Immaculate Conception, became the patron saint of the US in the 1840s

      Why Mary, as the Immaculate Conception, became the patron saint of the US in the 1840s

    • ICE protesters who interrupted Minnesota church service won’t face state charges, prosecutor says

      ICE protesters who interrupted Minnesota church service won’t face state charges, prosecutor says

    • Raising Dementia Awareness, One Black Church at a Time

      Raising Dementia Awareness, One Black Church at a Time

    • Trump Pledges $100M To Cuba, But Only If Faith‑Based Groups Distribute It

      Trump Pledges $100M To Cuba, But Only If Faith‑Based Groups Distribute It

    Conversations that Matter.

    © 2026 Baptist News Global. All rights reserved.

    Want to share a story? We hope you will! Read our republishing, terms of use and privacy policies here.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • RSS
    • 129