Toronto Star

TRAYVON’S LEGACY

Documentar­y delves into teen’s death in the context of U.S. racial turmoil,

- SONAIYA KELLEY

A Florida jury on July 13, 2013, acquitted neighbourh­oodwatch volunteer George Zimmerman of fatally shooting Trayvon Martin, a hoodiewear­ing unarmed Black teenager, during an angry confrontat­ion in a gated community on a rainy night. Just over five years later, the resonance from that tragedy has become deeper and more painful.

The case rocked and divided the nation, touching off a prickly debate over race, guns, socalled stand-your-ground laws and self-defence. Then-president Barack Obama said on TV that if he had a son, “he’d look like Trayvon.” Thousands of protesters flooded the streets after the verdict acquitting Zimmerman of second-degree murder, announced after 16 hours of deliberati­on over the course of two days.

The furor over the Martin shooting has been a fiery touchstone over the past half-decade in the wake of numerous shootings of unarmed Black men by law enforcemen­t, NFL players taking a knee during the playing of the national anthem, a deadly march in Charlottes­ville, Va., and racially charged comments by President Donald Trump and other conservati­ves.

It is also the launch pad for a new six-part documentar­y, Rest in Power: The Trayvon Martin Story, an extensive examinatio­n of the shooting that also places it in the context of the prickly national discourse over race. The project was to debut Monday on the Paramount Network and BET in the U.S. and Canada.

The directors of the documentar­y, Jenner Furst and Julia Willoughby Nason, said they wanted to expose what they called the systemic racism that contribute­d to the not-guilty verdict as well as to provide an opportunit­y for Martin’s parents, Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin, to share their story on the screen for the first time. Rest in Power was inspired in large part by the 2017 book Rest in Power: The Enduring Life of Trayvon Martin by Fulton and Martin.

“We have a chance to take this series and use what the country has learned from Trayvon Martin, both the positive and the negative backlash, to (understand) the Trayvon Martin to Donald Trump syndrome of America,” Furst said.

While the shooting, the ensuing investigat­ion and trial serve as the heart of the series, the filmmakers spent time fleshing out a broader political spectrum that may have affected the case.

“It was a turning point in the country,” Furst said. “You had the first African American president, and you had some people foolishly saying that we were living in a post-racial America. And when Trayvon Martin was killed, it was an awakening for a lot of people that certain things hadn’t changed and that there was going to be far more Trayvon Martins than Barack Obamas. And that realizatio­n, that pain, that sense of injustice motivated a lot of people to act, and it changed the landscape of our country.”

Rest in Powercan be measured in vision and scope to the Oscar-winning O.J.: Made in America, the 7 1/2-hour documentar­y that used the murder case, trial and acquittal of the football legend as a foundation to explore the social and political unrest of the nation.

The directors had previously teamed on the Peabody Awardwinni­ng Time: The Kalief Browder Story, a documentar­y miniseries about the high school student who was incarcerat­ed for three years without being convicted of a crime. He killed himself in 2015.

Furst and Nason were ap- proached by rapper Jay Z, who had secured the rights to Fulton and Martin’s book and who wanted to executive-produce an onscreen adaptation.

“Jay is a very thoughtful collaborat­or, and he understand­s the importance of all the legwork that goes into making a film like this,” Furst said. “We were grateful that Jay had the faith in us to hit the ground and investigat­e this. I think it’s a testament to his sophistica­tion as an artist that he understand­s how these projects work. He’s an incredible partner, and we’re very grateful to have him on board.”

More than100 people were interviewe­d, and the filmmakers used an investigat­ive team that included a New York Times journalist for the series.

“We’re very thorough,” Furst said. “Our approach to storytelli­ng is based on characters. In the end, people don’t learn from statistics and headlines, they learn from human connection.”

The filmmakers also attempted to interview Zimmerman, but he did not respond to their requests.

For Fulton and Martin, the project was both cathartic and emotional. They wanted audiences to view them as they talked about the life and death of Trayvon Benjamin Martin, “17 years old and 21 days,” Martin said.

“It was important for us as parents to get our side of the story out,” he said. “We thought it was important that the story get told from the two people who knew Trayvon best.” Fulton called the miniseries “thought-provoking” and “real” despite being “very hard to watch.”

But the opening of the first episode shows that their pain is still raw. Fulton is shown saying, “The life I used to have is absolutely gone. They say that time heals all wounds. It does not.”

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 ?? CHACHI SENIOR/PARAMOUNT NETWORK/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Sybrina Fulton, centre, and Tracy Martin, in the LOVE hat, lead Trayvon Martin’s Peace Walk in Miami Gardens, Fla., in February.
CHACHI SENIOR/PARAMOUNT NETWORK/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Sybrina Fulton, centre, and Tracy Martin, in the LOVE hat, lead Trayvon Martin’s Peace Walk in Miami Gardens, Fla., in February.

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