I Heard it Through the Grapevine

Documentaire
    Réalisé par Dick Fontaine, Pat Hartley • Écrit par James Baldwin, Dick Fontaine, Pat Hartley
    États-Unis • 1982 • 91 minutes • Vidéo • Couleur et Noir & Blanc
  • N° ISAN :
    ISAN 0000-0003-6A88-0000-K-0000-0000-E
Résumé

Dick Fontaine revient sur le mouvement des droits civiques aux États-Unis et réexamine leurs idéaux vingt ans plus tard. Dans les villes du Sud, haut lieux de lutte, il rencontre d’anciens militants, suit l’écrivain James Baldwin, et s’interroge sur la situation actuelle du pays.

Dick Fontaine returns to the civil rights movement in the USA and takes a fresh look at their ideals twenty years on. In the cities of the South, the hotspots of the struggle, he meets former activists, follows the writer James Baldwin, and questions the country’s current situation.

"Two decades after the Civil Rights Movement, James Baldwin revisits historical places stretching from the South to the North – from Selma and Birmingham, Alabama to Atlanta, Georgia and on to the battleground beaches of St. Augustine, Florida and the Dr Martin Luther King Memorial in Washington, D. C. On this journey down memory lane, he engages in conversations with friends, activists and fellow writers such as Amiri Baraka, Oretha Castle Haley and Chinua Achebe, reflecting on the past events that sparked the fight against racial segregation, the attacks on churches, racist police brutality and the arbitrary injustices which the Black population had to endure. Questioning their own legacy, these luminaries look at the present and how little has actually been achieved in the wake of the movement, and we, the audience are equally encouraged to reflect on our own era. Dick Fontaine skilfully weaves archival materials into the accounts, making his film at once a poignant historical document and highly relevant today in the context of the Black Lives Matter movement."
(Berlinale)

Sélections et distinctions
Comment avoir accès au film ?