The (racially) mysterious man-eater and vamp trope. Literally! That is exactly what Mary is. Whoa. Thinking about her through this literally device, she was always going to be turned and then turn Stack. The trope made her do it.
Bad men and femme fatales…you better write, Coogler!
On your question of Coogler imagining a narrative where people paid attention to a visibly Black woman lead character like we do Mary…first thought is no, not his lane. Or let me put it in your own words: “it's also important to think about Mary based on some of what Coogler was doing with his main character(s).” Coogler’s women characters only matter as tools to flesh out the men’s inner lives. But, I’ll be fair and think on it more. --Cindy Reed
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Well, don't think too long on Coogler's representations of women, as you'll end up a bit annoyed.
In the popular culture classes that Cali and I have taught, we're kind of obligated (in a good way) to reference the Bechdel Test. Well, Sinners fails that test in a big way. I don't think any women in the film speak to each other, and if they do, they don't talk about anything other than a man. Conversely, think about how many people that Smoke, Stack, and Sammie talk to. Men. Women. Children, Lovers. White people. Black people. Asian. What do the men talk about? Other Men. Business. Women. Sex. Negotiating. Traveling. Crime. Violence. Dreams. Racism. Regrets. Vengeance. --Howard Rambsy II