The Kansas City Star (Sunday)

Filmmaker Yance Ford presents the police as the ‘armies that they have become’ in ‘Power’

- BY MARK OLSEN

Charting the history of policing in America, the new documentar­y “Power” is rooted in questions: Who exactly are the police meant to serve? And whose interests are they protecting? Utilizing an essay form, the film turns to an impressive roster of legal experts, scholars, journalist­s and law-enforcemen­t officials to bring the viewer along for an inquisitiv­e probing of an issue that cuts to the core of social divides.

When director Yance Ford’s 2017 film “Strong Island,” was nominated for an Oscar for documentar­y feature, it made him the first openly transgende­r director to have a film nominated for an Academy Award.

“Strong Island” examines the story of how Ford’s brother William, then a 24-year-old teacher, was shot to death by a white 19-year-old mechanic in 1992 in an incident a grand jury found justifiabl­e. The film explores in intimate detail the impact the criminal justice system has on one family’s grief.

With “Power,” Ford takes on a much broader scope, while still grounding the documentar­y very much in personal inquiry and curiosity. The core missions of police to protect property and control population­s are often at odds with public safety and community concerns. Though the film does not provide easy answers, it does point in the direction of what could be done to make relations between police and citizens less opposition­al.

“This film is a tool for people who do this work,” said Ford,

52, during a recent interview. “I hoped that it would be something that people who work to reimagine our definition of public safety can use.”

“Power,” which premiered earlier this year at the Sundance Film Festival, begins streaming on Netflix May 17. While traveling to promote the film, Ford recently spoke with The Times on Zoom from Toronto. when I see these images, I’m reminded of how little we learn from history. I’m reminded of how easy it is for people to regurgitat­e talking points that were used to delegitimi­ze student movements in the ‘60s, talk of outside agitators, talk of profession­al agitators. It’s all so familiar in a way that honestly makes me wonder if the United States is simply doomed to repeat the past over and over again. The universiti­es are calling in police to do what police do, which is to contain and control and remove people who are seen as disturbanc­es to the status quo.

many ways, I’ve been thinking about policing since there were detectives in my parents’ house explaining to them why the person who killed my brother wasn’t going to be charged with a crime. But when George Floyd was murdered and the protests were happening in the aftermath, I saw and felt something different in the reaction of police to the protests around the country. And in the city where I live, New York, that felt different. It felt dangerous. It felt unrestrain­ed. And it felt like there had been a shift. This feeling got me asking the question “Is this what police are for” in a way that felt different than the times I had asked that question in the past. These were police acting as an occupying force and acting, quite frankly, as the armies that they have become.

And that’s what started the line of questionin­g that turned into the film. It was less about the 10,000-foot view of what my family had gone through and more about what I was seeing play out on the streets in the United States and around the world. Being in New York watching protesters being kettled [a crowd-control confinemen­t tactic], pepper-sprayed – aggression is not even the word. It was the kind of violent response that reacted as if protesters were the problem, as opposed to Derek Chauvin’s murder of George Floyd being the problem. And so when I saw this violent response to protests, I started asking the question about the purpose and the meaning and the function of police in a different way.

put that at the top of the film because I know that this subject of policing is one where the current debate has been Black Lives Matter [or] Blue Lives Matter. Whenever policing is brought up as an “issue,” there are folks who will think that a documentar­y will be a polemic against the police or that a documentar­y will be something that reinforces their own analysis of policing. And what I wanted to do was invite the audience, regardless of where they sit in relation to this issue, to come to the film as they are. So I know that if you are of a particular viewpoint that you will be suspicious of me and my intentions. And so I wanted to say: You know what? I get it. I don’t assume that you’re going to trust me if you’re suspicious. I want you to watch the film anyway. I understand that you might be curious to learn the informatio­n in this film because you’re predispose­d to being interested, and that predisposi­tion is also fine. I recognize all of that and I’d like you to engage with the film anyway.

think that’s the great thing about this film. It is factchecke­d up one side and down the other. Because I assume and expect that when we release the film, that there will be people who say, “That’s not right.” And thankfully my partners at Multitude Films and the entire team, as well as our fantastic factchecke­r, will all be able to say, “Actually, no, we have our receipts here. We’ve done the research.” And policing is not as old as you think it is. It is a mid-19th century invention, and it was not invented to ensure or to maintain public safety or to fight crime.

It was invented to protect property and to control property and to control movement and to break up unions and to help the country expand westward by removing Indigenous people from their land. There are many ways in which people can debate policing and where it might go from here. But one of the really important things for us was to establish facts and to research these facts in such a way that you can’t actually argue with them. By doing that, we help people get outside the moment and start to think about the ways in which history impacts the present.

researched a lot of different police officers, police commanders, police chiefs around the country who were doing work in their department­s. And Charlie Adams rose to a place on the list that was interestin­g to us because he is in Minneapoli­s and he’s been doing work for a long time trying to help his officers at the 4th Precinct understand the perspectiv­e of the community and the people who live in the community in which they serve. Charlie Adams is a great character because he is someone who you see has good intentions, but he’s also someone who is restricted by the contours of the institutio­n in which he works. There are aspects of the criminal legal system that limit the effectiven­ess of what he can do. I think that Charlie Adams tries to do what he can, but then when you see this thing where he butts up against the reality of policing, that helps you understand that it has to be about more than individual chiefs or individual officers.

When we think about what keeps communitie­s safe, we can’t fall into this trap of talking about the behavior of individual­s or to try another round of reforms that come from policing out into the community. We really have to approach it in a different way and about solutions that come from communitie­s to police, and think about institutio­nal reform or reimagine a different institutio­n. I think that’s one of the things that being with Inspector Adams really shows is that there’s a really powerful institutio­n behind every individual officer. And it’s the institutio­n that needs to be addressed.

is the ‘we,’” in my view, relates directly to the question at the end of the film about power conceding nothing without a demand. Because knowing who the “we” is is a part of defining what the demand will be. What demand are you going to make of police? What demand am I going to make of police? As soon as we get specific about who the we is, then we can drill down and understand what we will demand of policing. Because for too long the people whose job it is to regulate police, to tell police what their job is and how to do their job, they’ve walked away from it or they’ve left it up to police to be this self-regulating industry.

If it were a business, we would say, “Internet companies, you can regulate yourselves.” And we know from history how well self-regulation has gone in the business world. But we haven’t had people in elected office who’ve been willing to take up their responsibi­lity to regulate the police. And so people are deciding that it’s their job as citizens to do so.

they’re synonyms – they are one and the same. Police are the power of the state made real. You and I and other people, some more so than you and I, will interact with police way more often than they will interact with their elected representa­tive or senator. So in terms of how the government and the state is made manifest in people’s lives, the answer to that is police. When you think about who is the most powerful person, like [journalist] Wes Lowery says, in this country, on a day-to-day basis, it’s police for most people. And so I wanted to just be really clear about the lens through which the film is going to look at police and policing.

And it’s also just a great title, if I do say so myself. It tells you what you’re going to see. When you buy a ticket to a film called “Power,” you’ve got a sense of what you’re in for.

Water is a popular motif with product designers because it symbolizes tranquilit­y and clarity. But this force of nature also “adds movement, freedom and flow in a space,” said Golnar Roshan, who with her partner, Ruben de la Rive Box, recently introduced a rug collection called Fluid that evokes the moody skies reflected in the canals of Amsterdam, where they live.

“I like to mix worlds that seem far apart, create unexpected connection­s and imaginativ­e short circuits between things,” Paola Navone, a designer in Milan, said of her collection of new pendant lights with diffusers of milky white or limpid blue glass that visually create an oceanic sway. (The lamps are called Oblò, which is Italian for “porthole.”)

These and other fresh, splashy products are presented here.

The interlocki­ng handblown vases by Los Angeles artist and designer Mansi Shah – part of her first housewares line, Manu Nanu – fit together like molecules. “The glass itself possesses a water-like quality,” she said, adding that she likes to keep the vases on a windowsill, where sunlight passes through and casts shadows that “dance and shift like ripples.” Available in amber, cobalt blue and teal for $80. manunanu.com

After producing a ceiling lamp with a bulbous glass filament that rises from the center to evoke a water drop splashing in a pool, Beacon Custom Lighting followed with its Pond decanter. Designed by Dean Maltz, a New York City architect, the handblown carafe is $260. beaconcust­omlighting.com

Chinese American artist Tina Scepanovic discovered what she described as the “hidden power” of water while swimming competitiv­ely as a teenager. For her Narcissus catchall, she applied the loose gestures of Chinese brush painting to metal sculpture to encapsulat­e the object’s qi, or vital energy. “The pool form is a portal into another dimension,” she said. Available in bronze or white brass for $650. oblist.com

“To construct or deconstruc­t, water is your tool,” said Joseph Algieri, a New York City designer. In his Constructi­on vases, a flood of pigmented foam breaks through the ceramic barriers, defeating any expectatio­n that water should be contained in a vessel. Available for $850. josephalgi­eri.com “I am a Pisces and water is my natural element,” said Paola Navone about Oblò, her nautical-inspired lighting for the Italian company Lodes. The pendant lamps are suspended like buoys with “no sense of earth or gravity,” she said. Available in three bulbous shapes and five finishes; price upon request. lodes.com/en/

The Windy collection by Oki Sato, founder of the Tokyo design studio Nendo, consists of grès porcelain tiles with subtly incised patterns like the marks made by a breeze on the surface of water, rice paddies and grasslands. The tiles, which are produced by Decoratori Bassanesi, come in four patterns and four colors: Rice, Almond, Dolomite and Pepper, at $18 per square foot. decoratori­bassanesi.it

Describing the origins of her Fluid rug collection for the Dutch company Moooi, Golnar Roshan of Amsterdam design firm Rive Roshan recalled that the floor of her canal-side studio “was almost level with the water, a few feet from the front door.” She added, “The way it rippled and reflected the light and the sky had this intriguing influence.” Available in rectangula­r and circular versions, from $3,250. moooi.com/us

The Wave series produced by Kast, an English concrete basin company, complement­s the bathroom’s default theme of water. The curvy fixtures, called Tilde, Dune and Prim, are available in 28 colors – including Storm (blue) and Brick (terra cotta). The Dune basin shown is $3,225. kastconcre­tebasins.com

The rim of the Tanba basket by Enkay follows the sinuous lines of a river. “Water motifs have an enduring place in interior design because of the softness they bring to spaces, especially as accents,” said the company’s founder, Asha Chaudhary. The baskets are handwoven with ilala palm leaves sourced from Zimbabwe. The small version is 18 inches in diameter and $408. enkay.com

 ?? NETFLIX TNS ?? A scene from the documentar­y “Power” directed by Yance Ford.
NETFLIX TNS A scene from the documentar­y “Power” directed by Yance Ford.
 ?? TOMMASO BODDI TNS ?? Director Yance Ford attends Netflix's "Power" Sundance Film Festival premiere on Jan. 18, in Park City, Utah.
TOMMASO BODDI TNS Director Yance Ford attends Netflix's "Power" Sundance Film Festival premiere on Jan. 18, in Park City, Utah.
 ?? HANDOUT NYT ?? Nautical-inspired Obl lighting from the Italian company Lodes. Symbolizin­g tranquilli­ty and clarity, water is the inspiratio­n behind many brands’ creations.
HANDOUT NYT Nautical-inspired Obl lighting from the Italian company Lodes. Symbolizin­g tranquilli­ty and clarity, water is the inspiratio­n behind many brands’ creations.

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