‘Moonlight’ director hopes to resonate with the ‘disenfranchised’

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A coming-of-age film about a gay black man in an impoverished Miami neighbourhood may speak to those Americans who feel marginalised ahead of the U.S. presidential election on Nov. 8, according to “Moonlight” director Barry Jenkins.

“Moonlight,” out in U.S. theatres on Friday, follows a boy named Chiron through three defining moments of his life in childhood, adolescence and adulthood, as he grapples with his sexuality and identity among his peers.

“There are a lot of people in America who feel disenfranchised, who feel voiceless,” Jenkins told a foreign media agency.

“I think our story, for its specificity of character and place, is giving voice to the world and a certain kind of person that normally is unheard.”

The film has garnered strong praise from critics and is already being touted by experts as a frontrunner in Hollywood’s annual awards season.

Jenkins, who grew up in Miami, drew attention to social disconnect within America, which he said was caused by “the fact that we don’t see each other often enough and when we don’t see each other, we create interpretations.”

“There is a candidate running for president right now who probably doesn’t know anybody like the people he disparages quite often,” he said.

“Moonlight” comes eight years after Jenkins’ feature-length debut, “Medicine for Melancholy.”

The director said his two films bookend Barack Obama’s presidency, that Obama’s time in the White House was “deeply impactful to myself and the group of black artists that I like, I am in league with.”

“No matter who wins the election, I think my duty as an American filmmaker will be to give voice to whatever shift in the climate takes place as a result of that election,” he added.