Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Crime + Punishment (2018)

Director: Stephen Maing
Run Time: 112 minutes

“Sensitive portraiture and vigorous investigative reporting, Crime + Punishment tracks the struggle of minority police officers within the NYPD to reshape the culture of law enforcement itself. Maing’s film also proves arresting in its composition, its moody, city-spanning drone photography, its occasional playful looseness. But its power rises from the courage of its subjects, men and women who don’t necessarily want to be fighting the system – they’re eager to be out there in their city, policing the way they consider just.”
– Alan Scherstuhl, The Village Voice.


Labels: Police, Social Justice

Tribal Justice (2017)

Director: Anne Makepeace
Run Time: 87 minutes

Tribal Justice provides a compelling and humane face for tribal sovereignty… In this clear-eyed and honest film, we gain a sense of the humanity residing within the tribal justice system and with it, the optimism for tribal communities to succeed on their own terms.”– N. Bruce Duthu, Professor of Native American Studies, Dartmouth College.


Labels: Tribal Sovereignty

The If Project (2015)

Director: Kathlyn Horan
Time Run: 88 minutes

“It’s an especially remarkable achievement, given our level of intimacy with the subjects; we even follow three of the inmates as they are being released, and in the days and months afterwards. No matter their crime, each of them has a story worth hearing, and if the goal of incarceration is rehabilitation, there is no question that the writing workshops are a marvelous thing.” – Christopher Llewellyn Reed, Film Festival Today.


Label: Prison System

Death by Design: The Dirty Secret of Our Digital Addiction (2016)

Director: Sue Williams 
Run Time: 73 and 53 minutes versions

“Both jaw-dropping and heartbreaking, Death by Deign forces the view to reconsider their whole approach to technology and this mad and unsustainable obsession with constantly upgrading.” – Hannah Clugston, Aesthetica Magazine


Labels: Electronics, Pollution, Environment, Sustainability

This is Home: A Refugee Story (2018)

Director: Alexandra Shiva
Run Time: 91 minutes

“An engaging, respectful, and realistic account of refugee resettlement in America… A must-seen in classes engaging refugeeism and resettlement as well as for communities interested in learning more about the realities and challenges of resettlement for newly arrived refugees.” – Dr. Diya Abdo, Associate Professor of English, Founder/Director, Every Campus A Refuge, Guilford College.

“Warm, personable… Hopeful, positive… offers constructive counterpoint that dilutes the strident nativist voices of those who would demonize refugees…” – The Utah Review.

Labels: Refugee crisis, Middle East, Immigration

Keepers of the Future: La Coordinadora of El Salvador (2017)

Director: Avi Lewis
Run Times: 24 minutes

“This film brings together two crucial topics that are rarely discussed in conjunction: community organization and the climate crises… In Keepers of the Future we see firsthand how organizing can overcome vulnerability.” 

– Michael Dougherty, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Illinois State University.



Labels: Environmentalism, Conservation, El Salvador

A Dangerous Idea: Eugenics, Genetics, and the American Dream (2018)

Director: Stephanie Welch
Run Time: 106 minutes

A Dangerous Idea is extremely timely because with the current administration we are seeking a renewed threat of biologically determined politics.” – Robert Reich, author and former U.S. Secretary of Labor.

“You have these people who… just seem to have missed the whole point of the country. And they actually think that the founding reality of profound inequality is fine with them. And that view even tries to masquerade as science.” – Van Jones, activist, commentator, author, and non-practicing attorney. (film website)


Label: Activism, Civil Rights, Discrimination, Genetics

The Most Dangerous Year (2018)

Director: Vlada Knowlton
Run Time: 89 minutes

“Timely, personal and eye-opening, The Most Dangerous Year” takes a clear stance on a controversial issue – but more critically, it humanizes the hot button topic of gender identity and documents the community level fight for civil rights.” 

– Paul Carlson, Escape Into Film (full review)

Labels: LGBTQ, Civil Rights, Social Justice

Awake: A Dream from Standing Rock (2017)

Directors: Josh Fox, James Spione, Myron Dewey
Run Time: 89 minutes

“Our students ask: what are we to do? And for those of use who don’t know what to say, Awake shows us what we must do, and how we must do it. And we must do it now! We are at Standing Rock: if we do not act to protect Earth now, who will?”  

- Ronnie D. Lipschultz, Professor of Politics & Provost of Rachel Carson College, University of California, Santa Cruz

Labels: Standing Rock, Activism

Killing for Love (2018)

Director: Marcus Vetter and Karin Steinberger
Run Time: 120 minutes

“There are moments in the totally riveting Killing for Love when a fictional thriller suggests itself, complete with casting. The two young people (they met when he was 18, she a couple of years older) on trial for murdering her parents suggest the sort of British actors we are so rich in. She softly spoken, almost inaudible, hinting at unspeakable attentions from her mother, the educated voice evoking her Canadian-European background; he, round-faced and bespectacled, looking far younger, quick wit enunciated in perfect English, is from a German diplomatic family. The letters produced smolder with passion. What a drama!” – Martin Hoyle, Financial Times (film press & reviews)

Labels: Murder, Love, Revenge

The Reluctant Radical (2017)

Director: Lindsey Grayzel
Run Time: 77 minutes

“The Reluctant Radical is the most striking environmental documentary I’ve seen to date and I have seen plenty. It is an absolute must-see.” – The Marin Post.

“He was told he was crazy, but crazy is sitting idle by as disaster for young people is knowingly locked in.” 
– Dr. James Hansen

The Reluctant Radical follows activist Ken Ward as he confronts his fears and puts himself in the direct path of the fossil fuel industry.”  – promotional materials


Labels: Environmentalism, Climate change