Hey, Boo: HarperLee & To Kill a MockingBird
Intriguing Documentary Revisits "To Kill a Mockingbird"
Hey, Boo
Unrated
Distributor: First Run Features
Director - Mary McDonagh Murphy
Run Time - 82 minutes
Language - English
Format - Digital
Year - 2010
Genre - Documentary
Film Reviewed by Kam Williams
Excellent (4 stars)
In 1961, Harper Lee, an unknown white woman from a small town in Alabama,
won a Pulitzer Prize for her groundbreaking novel, "To Kill a Mockingbird."
Released at the height of the African-American struggle against Jim Crow
segregation, the book played a pivotal role in raising the country’s
awareness of racism while simultaneously serving to shame the South about
its disgraceful legacy of lynching, oppression and discrimination.

A couple of years later, the screen adaptation of the best seller earned
several Academy Awards, including Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Actor.
Gregory Peck delivered his career performance as Atticus Finch, an attorney
defending a black man unfairly accused of rape.
Unfortunately, Harper Lee basically became a recluse after 1964, which is
when she granted her last interview with the press. She also never published
another novel, which has led to considerable speculation about the reasons
for her silence and for her failure to write again.
After all, she and Truman Capote had been best friends as children, and it
is apparent that the characters Scout and Jem in "To Kill a Mockingbird" are
based on the two of them. Their relationship would endure into adulthood,
and it was even the subject of a recent bio-pic about Capote.

All of the above and more fascinating factoids are unearthed in Hey, Boo as
intriguing a documentary as you could ever hope to encounter. Since Ms. Lee
did not cooperate with the project, director Mary Murphy depended on the
reflections of luminaries like Oprah, Tom Brokaw, Andrew Young Jon Meacham
and Scott Turow for insight into the reasons for the very private author’s
uncompromising withdrawal from the public eye.
What turns out to be perhaps most compelling is how closely "To Kill a
Mockingbird" mirrors events which transpired in Lee’s own life. For
instance, she was a tomboy and the same age as Scout, 6, at the time that
her father, a lawyer like Atticus, was representing a black man accused of a
crime he didn’t commit.
A fitting tribute to a true American icon, a half century after she subtly
helped shape the course of history and left an indelible mark on the
country’s conscience.
Trailer featuring comments from Oprah Winfrey, James McBride and others.