Los Angeles Times

Separated only by prison walls

- JUSTIN CHANG FILM CRITIC

‘ Time,’ a wrenching story of love and injustice, is one of 2020’ s greatest docs.

The opening sequence of “Time,” Garrett Bradley’s haunting, heartrendi­ng documentar­y, is a nearly sixminute masterpiec­e in miniature. It’s a montage of home- video snippets, shot over several years by Sibil Fox Richardson, who goes by Fox Rich. We first see her aiming the camera at herself and trying to f igure out the best angle — the f irst of many moments in which she’ll gently assert her authorship, framing and reframing her own image. She

speaks of her husband, Robert Richardson, who’s in prison, noting she herself was released about a week earlier. Moving on to a happier subject, she announces she’s pregnant with twins, standing up to reveal her gently swollen belly.

Before she can say much more, one of her young sons, Laurence, pops into the frame with a goofy grin — and for the next few minutes the camera is giddily aloft, leaping from one scene to the next, in what almost feels like a single uninterrup­ted movement. Piano chords f lood the soundtrack, and images f lood the screen: We see Rich hanging out with her boys at home, splashing about with them in a pool, lecturing them in the car and jostling next to them on a carnival ride. Eventually she addresses the camera again, quietly beaming: “Do you see this smile, Robert?” she whispers. “Do you know how hard I’m gonna be smiling when you come home?”

It’s an intensely intimate sequence, teeming with life, pulsing with joy and yet marked by a powerful, palpable absence. Rich filmed these moments so that her husband could see a little of what he’d missed after his eventual release. Many years later, she turned over her roughly 100- hour trove of material to Bradley, who had already been filming Rich and her six sons ( including those now fully grown twins, Freedom and Justus). Bradley and her editor, Gabriel Rhodes, began cutting together the past and present footage and what emerged was a prismatic story of crime and punishment, a critical portrait of the prison system’s many casualties and an 81- minute, two- decades- spanning epic of love, devotion and perseveran­ce.

“Time,” which opens in select theaters this week and begins streaming Oct. 16 on Amazon, is an artful puzzle, a hypnotic game of chronologi­cal hopscotch. But as constructe­d by Bradley, who won a directing prize at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, it’s bound by certain formal unities. Despite the clear contrast between the

rough- hewn archival video and the sharp, shimmering­ly beautiful newer material ( shot by Zac Manuel, Justin Zweifach and Nisa East), the entire movie is rendered in black and white. It’s a visual choice that allows both time frames to gently blur while still remaining distinct, even as they are often tied together by the melancholy strains and surging arpeggios of Jamieson Shaw and Edwin Montgomery’s score.

Most of all, perhaps, “Time” is held together by Rich’s remarkable voice — soft and raspy in the older clips, deeper and more declarativ­e in the more recent ones. It’s clear from the outset that she’s a born storytelle­r. She tells us how she and Robert fell in love as teenagers, married in 1997 and hoped to open a hip- hop clothing store in Shreveport, La. When their plans fell through, they committed a foolish, desperate act and

tried to rob a credit union. Rich, who drove the getaway car, received a plea deal and served three- and- a- half years. Robert was convicted and sentenced to 60 years in prison, a staggering sentence for a robbery in which no one was hurt. ( The story of Robert’s nephew, who also participat­ed in the crime, goes untold here.)

“Sixty years … of human life,” an older Rich murmurs, with more disbelief than selfpity. By this point her husband has served 20 years of that sentence, and she’s spent a lot of time petitionin­g for his release, filing appeals and making endless phone calls on his behalf. She’s also given lectures about her family’s experience and the injustices of a carceral state in which Black people are grotesquel­y overrepres­ented, which she and others liken to a modern- day reconstitu­tion of slavery. Rich and her children might not be behind bars but as long as Robert is, they are not, in any meaningful sense, free.

And the devastatin­g loss they feel is somehow made more acute, rather than less, by the very real counterpre­sence of joy, success and fulfillmen­t in their lives. “Time” is a patchwork of moments big and small: We see Freedom speaking in a political science debate, Justus impressing his mom with some of his college French and their older brother Remington graduating from dental school. Most of all, we see Rich gradually ( though not always chronologi­cally) coming into her own, whether she’s publicly reckoning with her long- ago crime at church, taping a TV commercial for the car dealership she now runs or speaking publicly about the pain of growing older without her husband — and seeing her boys grow up without their father.

Rich rarely looks more radiant than she does in those speeches, partly because we can see the effect of her words on her listeners — most of them other Black women held rapt by her intensity of feeling — and partly because of the unapologet­ic glamour with which she’s presented. That glamour suffuses nearly all the recent footage, bringing an intense, almost sacralizin­g beauty to bear on simple deeds and gestures: a young man ironing a shirt, a woman steeling herself for another dispiritin­g phone call. Some of these images recur steadily throughout, as if to remind us of the repetition that comes with waiting, the ritualisti­c despair that seeps into every moment.

The saddest recurring image is a silent God’s- eye view of the Louisiana State Penitentia­ry, which is as close as we get to seeing Robert during his incarcerat­ion, apart from the life- sized cardboard cutout of him that graces the Richardson­s’ walls. His absence quietly haunts the movie even as it builds toward a moment of such shattering emotional force that the screen can hardly contain it; it all but ruptures the surface of a movie that is already a record in fragments.

“Time” can make you weep for a hundred reasons, from joy, pain or recognitio­n, but its wounds and its glories are finally inextricab­le from one of the paradoxes of moviemakin­g itself. Cinema can magically compress decades into hours and transform lives into narratives, but what it erects here is ultimately a monument to something irretrieva­ble. Cherish every moment of this movie, because each one stands in for all the others that have been lost.

 ?? Amazon Studios ?? FOX RICH f ilmed little everyday moments of herself and her six kids for years so that her husband could see some of what he’d missed while he was away in prison.
Amazon Studios FOX RICH f ilmed little everyday moments of herself and her six kids for years so that her husband could see some of what he’d missed while he was away in prison.
 ?? Sundance I nstitute ?? FOX RICH and husband Robert Richardson in the documentar­y “Time,” for which director Garrett Bradley won a prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
Sundance I nstitute FOX RICH and husband Robert Richardson in the documentar­y “Time,” for which director Garrett Bradley won a prize at the Sundance Film Festival.
 ?? Amazon Studios ?? “TIME” is rendered in black and white, which allows its time frames to gently blur yet remain distinct.
Amazon Studios “TIME” is rendered in black and white, which allows its time frames to gently blur yet remain distinct.

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