Los Angeles Times

Tales of injustice, ripped from the headlines

Many Sundance offerings focused on race, police and criminal justice, reflecting society’s own anxieties.

- By Steven Zeitchik

PARK CITY, Utah — During the recent Sundance Film Festival, while starry premieres were playing all over the Utah ski town, entertainm­ent mogul Harvey Weinstein convened a dinner in the name of a more socially conscious topic.

Weinstein, along with Jay Z, had produced a new documentar­y series titled “Time: The Kalief Browder Story.” Browder is the young New York man who was held at Rikers Island for three years without trial on minor charges and later hanged himself as a result of his trauma. Weinstein took the microphone to speak to the several dozen insiders who’d gathered, shifting simultaneo­usly into his two preferred modes: pitchman and crusader.

“It plays like a thriller, but it’s not a thriller, sadly,” he said of the series — which Spike will debut in March — and of prison conditions generally. “And something needs to be done about it.”

Weinstein would seem to be an unlikely, even problemati­c, poster child for the cause. Sure, he grew up in a working-class Queens neighborho­od during the 1960s. Yet the idea of a wealthy 64-year-old white man taking the podium to protest the state of the criminalju­stice system might appear, to say the least, a little odd — especially when Jay Z, whose 2016 track “spiritual” centered on police shootings of unarmed black men, was sitting silently just a few feet away.

But Weinstein is a heat-seeking missile when it comes to culture. Where he goes, it is going, or has already gone. The fact that he was touting this as big entertainm­ent — that he was behind a TV series about a mistreated Rikers inmate in the first place — was telling. Criminal justice stories, for better or worse, have gone pop.

Entertainm­ent about legal-system inequity isn’t new. Buster Keaton examined a wrongful shooting by an officer all the way back in his 1922 short “Cops.” Sidney Lumet’s 1970s films were preoccupie­d with how police did (or didn’t do) their jobs. More recently Ryan Coogler’s “Fruitvale Station” dramatized the transit-officer shooting of Oscar Grant, humanizing the protagonis­t and the tragedy in newly rich ways. Last sum-

mer, HBO’s “The Night Of ” sought to delve into the trade-offs and imperfecti­ons of the judicial system.

But a new moment is dawning. At Sundance this year, narratives about how we police our cities and prosecute our suspects were omnipresen­t.

The cops in Grant’s hometown of Oakland received their close-up in Peter Nicks’ doc “The Force,” while filmmaker Yance Ford offered a highly personal exploratio­n of the shooting of his black older brother and the malfeasanc­e that followed in “Strong Island,” which won a special jury award for storytelli­ng. Spike debuted episodes from the Browder piece, featuring Jay Z as an interviewe­e, and a pair of young African American filmmakers unveiled “Whose Streets?,” their ultra-vérité look at the Missouri city of Ferguson in the wake of the Michael Brown shooting.

Nor was it just documentar­ies. Stories about the criminal-justice system are exploding across media, in narrative films and scripted TV series. Sundance is the place where trends bubble up or at least converge in a way that makes everyone take notice. And it was hard not to feel like we’ve reached a new crescendo, a kind of peak-justice entertainm­ent era.

“There is a lot of reconcilin­g to be done between the criminal system and our society,” director Matt Ruskin said. Ruskin’s scripted, fact-based movie “Crown Heights,” about a wrongfully jailed Trinidadia­n man named Colin Warner and the 20-year efforts of his friend Carl King to free him, won the audience award in the U.S. dramatic competitio­n at the festival, then was sold to Amazon for an estimated $2 million. “Any story that makes people think about that — that makes people think about the human beings involved — is a good thing.”

Yet five years to the month after the killing of Trayvon Martin, at a moment when systems and problems remain entrenched, when the most complex entertainm­ent can’t match real-life narratives — and when a man who has proclaimed himself the “law-and-order candidate” has entered the Oval Office — it remains to be seen what the preoccupat­ion will yield. Will the (limited) effect of all that CNN coverage of the Black Lives Matter movement — people inclined to believe in the cause became “woke” but many white Americans and certainly white leaders did not shift their views — be repeated? Or will these pieces land and shape attitudes more profoundly?

A foreign-policy axiom has it that the broader the coalition, the narrower the mandate. Film and television about charged topics face a similar conundrum. Taking a serious social issue and crafting it into screen narrative means either diluting it for mass consumptio­n or retaining its seriousnes­s and reaching far fewer people. It’s the difference between “The Butler” and “The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution.”

This poses an ethical problem, since it means that, to sway a large number of minds, one must turn mistreatme­nt into entertainm­ent. And it poses a practical challenge, since it means that writers on a television series need take a topic of deep seriousnes­s and embroider into it some of the shinier tricks of an “Empire” or “Scandal.”

Reggie Rock Bythewood and Gina Prince-Bythewood, the couple behind some of the most popular black-oriented entertainm­ent in recent years (“Beyond the Lights,” together; many others, apart) faced this dilemma in making “Shots Fired.”

Starring Sanaa Lathan and Stephan James, the Fox series is about a pair of possibly racially motivated shootings in a North Carolina town — fictional but with strong overtones of Freddie Gray, Alton Sterling and other similar cases. “Shots Fired” was molded from interviews with real-life figures, from Oscar Grant’s mother to former New York City Police Commission­er Ray Kelly.

But it is also at heart a Fox television series: a commercial entertainm­ent, advertisin­g-driven and airing in prime time, requiring in some ways the loud, suspensefu­l hues of a network drama.

Creators sought to find harmony between these extremes. “Entertainm­ent was important to the network, but it was important to us too,” said Prince-Bythewood of the March debut. “Because none of this means anything if people don’t want to binge-watch it.”

“Our creed was to get the audience on the edge of their seats and when they’re leaning forward hit them with the truth,” added Rock Bythewood, seated next to his wife and Lathan in Park City several hours before the show’s Sundance premiere. “Hopefully meaningful change will land without the audience seeing it coming.”

Rock Bythewood said this meaning could differ depending on the viewer. For some it might be about better understand­ing people of color who feel targeted; for others, a new compassion for those in law enforcemen­t at an anxious time. The only clear-cut lesson they wanted to impart, he said, was closer cooperatio­n between police department­s and their communitie­s.

“It’s very important ‘Shots Fired’ doesn’t come off as a justsay-no show — you know, ‘just say no to racism,’ ” said Rock Bythewood. “Because I don’t think that really has an impact. It’s a call to action, but telling people what the action is is where we stand back.”

With that ambiguity, Rock Bythewood is cleverly trying to solve another problem: how to chisel through viewers’ hardened mental facades. Part of what played out with all the cable news coverage of the last few years is a law of diminishin­g returns: rather than change or erode existing perspectiv­es, it calcified them. For those who believed the system was flawed, the sight of so many protests just reinforced their sense of the problem.

For many people who thought the system was fine, all that coverage became an opportunit­y to rationaliz­e individual killings. Or it simply stopped landing much at all. Much of the evidence suggests that all the exposure of the Black Lives Matter movement only nudged the needle. A Pew study last summer found that, two years into the movement, more than a third of Americans “don’t understand [its] goals.” A different study the previous year, more than 15 months into mass protests, revealed that more white people than not believed African Americans received equal treatment in the criminal-justice system.

To watch these films and TV shows is to be gripped by a contradict­ion. On the one hand, one can’t help feeling that this era of entertainm­ent represents a quantum leap from when racially charged events couldn’t be assimilate­d by Hollywood. (The Watts riots and Rodney King uprising have yet to earn dedicated feature films even many decades after they occurred. And it was almost 50 years to the day between Martin Luther King’s march on Selma and Ava DuVernay’s movie “Selma.”)

Yet the cumulative effect of these movies is also depressive. The simple volume of the stories and the sheer inadequaci­es of the system they expose, can drain hope. These pieces remind that for every Colin Warner there is a Kalief Browder, a story being told precisely because it ended so tragically. Even the Warner tale is remarkable precisely because it rests on so much injustice.

“It’s a happy ending, but it’s not a happy ending,” said Carl King, whose friend spent 20 years in jail because of ineptitude and institutio­nal racism. “It was the happiest day of my life when Colin was freed. But why was he in there so long? I still have no answers.”

But maybe looking heavenward is only partly the point. Maybe the entertainm­ent is much like the work of improving the criminal justice system — incrementa­l, difficult and not always productive. Maybe the idea is not to change a culture or system wholesale but to chip away at individual­s, one streamed episode or movie ticket at a time.

As “Shots Fired” star Lathan said, “I hope this can be cathartic for people. There’s so much pain and anger. I just want it to lead to some understand­ing and compassion.” steve.zeitchik@latimes.com

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? SABAAH FOLAYAN, left, Tef Poe, Kayla Reed and Damon Davis of “Whose Streets?,” which screened at the recently completed Sundance festival in Park City, Utah.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times SABAAH FOLAYAN, left, Tef Poe, Kayla Reed and Damon Davis of “Whose Streets?,” which screened at the recently completed Sundance festival in Park City, Utah.
 ?? Lucas Alvarado Farrar Sundance Institute ?? “WHOSE STREETS?” is an ultra-vérité documentar­y that follows the aftermath of the fatal shooting by a police officer of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., in August 2014.
Lucas Alvarado Farrar Sundance Institute “WHOSE STREETS?” is an ultra-vérité documentar­y that follows the aftermath of the fatal shooting by a police officer of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., in August 2014.
 ?? Peter Nicks Sundance Institute ?? “THE FORCE,” Nicks’ film that observes the challenges and difficulti­es of modern policing, was just one of several offerings at the Sundance Film Festival about how cities in the U.S. are policed.
Peter Nicks Sundance Institute “THE FORCE,” Nicks’ film that observes the challenges and difficulti­es of modern policing, was just one of several offerings at the Sundance Film Festival about how cities in the U.S. are policed.
 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? DIRECTOR PETER NICKS takes a close view of police in Oakland, hometown of Oscar Grant, who was killed by a transit cop.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times DIRECTOR PETER NICKS takes a close view of police in Oakland, hometown of Oscar Grant, who was killed by a transit cop.
 ?? Sundance Institute ?? KALIEF BROWN and his saga are focus of documentar­y.
Sundance Institute KALIEF BROWN and his saga are focus of documentar­y.

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