Chicago Sun-Times

PRESENTS OF THE PAST

Black Harvest Film Festival at its best when examining history

- BY BILL STAMETS

HFor the Sun- Times istorical documentar­ies are the highlight of the Black Harvest Film Festival. From Saturday through Aug. 31, the Gene Siskel Film Center will screen 60 dramas and documentar­ies about African- American life. Filmmakers attend many screenings of their features and shorts.

Opening night is sold out. The shorts screening “A Black Harvest Feast” ( 7: 30 p. m. Aug. 5) will be followed by a reception. Receiving honors are Donnie Smith, Che “Rhymefest” Smith, and Margaret Caples fromthe Community FilmWorksh­op.

Closing night reprises the 1997 indie “love jones” ( 6: 30 p. m. Aug. 31). For the 20th anniversar­y screening, there’s an archival 35mm print of this beguiling romance set in Chicago’s black bohemian scene. A reception follows for director TheodoreWi­tcher, a Columbia College grad.

Slighter fiction this year includes bougie- indulging “DivaDiarie­s,” psychothri­ller “Killing Lazarus” and “The Rhythm in Blue” with a wedding cake- tasting tragedy. Workplace drama emerges in made- in- Chicago “Call Center” and the bizarrely toned “Title VII.” A California family implodes in “90 Minutes of the Fever,” a melodrama triggered by toxic hacker riots.

The shortest short is “A NewDay in the Chi,” a 2 1/ 2- minute civic anthem written by OM3 and narrated by Common. From Columbia College comes “Baracked.” A seriously confused young white male uses his wife’s mahogany hardwood eye shadow as amarital aid.

Fest regular Kevin Willmott once again draws on sports history at the University of Kansas, where he teaches film. This year he salutes pathbreaki­ng basketball coach John McClendon with “Fast Break.” Tio Hardiman fromViolen­ce Interrupte­rs breaks down black gun deaths in “The ChicagoWay.” Unavailabl­e for preview was “Whitney: Can IBeMe?,” aWhitney Houston documentar­y codirected by Nick Broomfield, known for profiling Courtney Love, Sarah Palin and Lily Tomlin.

Floyd Norman— Walt Disney’s first African- American animator— gives amaster class ( 1 p. m. Aug. 26) preceding the 3: 15 p. m. screening of “FloydNorma­n: An Animated Life.” Fest consultant Sergio Mims conducts an “Action! The Real Deal About Filmmaking” panel ( 3 p. m. Aug. 19) and “The Realities of Screenwrit­ing” workshop ( 1 p. m. Aug. 27).

The following documentar­y films are highly recommende­d:

“TellThemWe­Are Rising: The Story of Black Colleges andUnivers­ities” ( 5: 30 p. m. Aug. 6 and 8 p. m. Aug. 7): After directing documentar­ies about Emmett Till, civil rights activists and the Black Panthers, Stanley Nelson delivers a nuanced narrative about historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es. This entry is a fine follow- up to last year’s “Black Students and the Transforma­tion of the American University.”

“Quest” ( 3: 30 p. m. Aug. 12 and 8 p. m. Aug. 14): For nine years Jonathan Olshefski documents a North Philadelph­ia family. Unobtrusiv­ely shooting and recording sound, he chronicles Christophe­r “Quest” Rainey, his wife Christine and their daughter PJ. When Trump brays fromtheir TV set, “It is a disaster the way AfricanAme­ricans are living in many cases,” Christine talks back: “You don’t know how we live.” Olshefski lets us know in this case.

“Let It Fall: Los Angeles 1982- 1992” ( 8 p. mAug. 12): At 144minutes, the fest’s longest entry is an indelible, nearly encycloped­ic documentar­y examining race in L. A. John Ridley, screenwrit­er of “12 Years a Slave” ( and expected to attend), composes a canvas with powerful photograph­s and incisive interviews.

“Wilmington on Fire” ( 6 p. m. Aug. 17): Christophe­r Everett wrangles a trove of archival evidence to illustrate an unthinkabl­e racial tragedy in 1898 North Carolina. This is a timely background­er for today’s political terrain.

“Bronx Gothic” ( 8: 30 p. m. Aug. 23 and 6 p. m. Aug. 24): Andrew Rossi profiles Okwui Okpokwasil­i performing her one- woman show designed with collaborat­or Peter Born. Ian Hultquist contribute­s an eloquent score to this portrait of a brave, visceral artist.

“On the Sly: In Search of the Family Stone” ( 8: 30 p. m. Aug. 25 and 6 p. m. Aug. 26): Shot over 4,045 days, this diverting biopic discovers how ex- star Sly Stone supports himself: $ 5,000 fees for no- show interviews. Unlike his ex-“humanist” subject, Michael Rubenstone will show up at both screenings.

 ?? | PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Animator Floyd Norman works on Disney’s “Sleeping Beauty” in 1956.
| PROVIDED PHOTO Animator Floyd Norman works on Disney’s “Sleeping Beauty” in 1956.
 ?? | PROVIDED PHOTO ?? Christophe­r Rainey and wife Christine in “Quest.”
| PROVIDED PHOTO Christophe­r Rainey and wife Christine in “Quest.”

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