Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Director turns documentar­y into personal experience

- By Steve Dollar Steve Dollar is a freelance writer.

After years of filming and editing, Yance Ford thought he had finished making “Strong Island” in 2014. And then it hit him.

“I didn’t have the film that I wanted to have,” said Ford, whose Netflix documentar­y meditates on his brother William’s 1992 slaying, systemic racism and the implosion of their middle-class African-American family in a Long Island suburb.

“I realized what I had done by accident was to make a great film about grief,” said Ford, who was 19 when his older brother died after a tense encounter at a notorious neighborho­od chop shop. He was unarmed. The white teenage mechanic who shot and killed him was never prosecuted. The grand jury considered it a case of self-defense.

The more Yance Ford dug and the more he was willing to expose in family artifacts and first-person interviews, the closer “Strong Island” got to the complex and achingly personal memoir that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, where it won a special jury prize for storytelli­ng.

The filmmaker, a longtime series producer for the Public Broadcasti­ng Service’s “POV,” began shooting in 2008, and in late 2014 decided to revamp everything. “I started carrying my hard drives with me,” he said, “and my laptop.”

The decision led Ford to Copenhagen, where over four months in 2015 he worked closely with Danish editor Janus Billeskov Jansen, part of the team that made the bold Indonesian mass killing documentar­ies “The Act of Killing” (a 2014 Academy Award nominee) and “The Look of Silence.”

Jansen was “wading into this pool of racial tension that was very unfamiliar,” Ford recalled. “I was going to be, quite frankly, living in an almost exclusivel­y white country.”

Those jolts were crucial to reshaping the film.

“It was a scary moment for everybody, but it was a good decision,” said Joslyn Barnes, who began as an executive producer of the project and then became its hands-on producer, guiding Ford in the new direction.

Ford, living alone away from his partner, felt completely out of place. “And that let me focus just on the film.”

Encouraged by Jansen, Ford began breaking rules he had made for the film, such as not appearing on camera. The first-person perspectiv­e is now elemental. The forensic details are more extensive, as is the emotional power in the pages of William’s diary and photograph­s the filmmaker uncovered. He included new material from interviews, notably with his mother, who had died unexpected­ly in 2012. “I had a lot of her being sad and not enough of her righteous anger,” Ford said. “My mother is capable of expressing so many emotions at once, I had to let her do that.”

There also were unexpected side effects of an editor from a different culture.

“The Danes didn’t understand the American legal system at all,” Barnes said. “They kept forcing us to explain, explain, explain.”

Despite Ford’s success in translatin­g personal trauma into a universal message, he wants audiences to confront a core issue after the intense emotions the film so artfully evokes.

“The thing I want you to ask is that question about reasonable fear,” he said. “It’s not rhetorical. If people can take that extra step into the intellectu­al wrestling with the question of whose fear is reasonable, that for me would be the ultimate prize.”

 ?? BRENT N. CLARKE/AP ?? Yance Ford’s achingly personal documentar­y “Strong Island” premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.
BRENT N. CLARKE/AP Yance Ford’s achingly personal documentar­y “Strong Island” premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.

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