Color Adjustment

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Color Adjustment
Directed by Marlon Riggs
Produced by Vivian Kleiman
Written by Marlon Riggs
Music by Mary Watkins
Cinematography Rick Butler
Editing by Deborah Hoffmann
Running time 86 min.
IMDb profile

Color Adjustment is a 1992 documentary film that traces the evolution of the black image in television from the explicitly racist 1948 to more subtle 1988, where blacks are portrayed as wealthy and having achieved the American dream, an image that director Marlon Riggs finds inconsistent with reality. Featuring clips from Amos 'n' Andy, The Nat King Cole Show, Roots and others, Riggs portrays an illuminating history of the race conflict as reflect in television.[1]

Color Adjustment was met with high critical praise, receiving a Peabody Award and being nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance.[2] It was also aired as part of the P.O.V. series on PBS.

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