In this documentary by Marilyn Ness the backdrop is Baltimore’s crisis of
police/community relations, and the faces of her subjects — dedicated law
enforcement personnel, activists, political figures — may be pained, but
their efforts to find a healing path forward are palpable and usually hopeful.
Filmed
over three years of escalated violence, and shaded by a climate
of deep mistrust between cops and people of color after the 2015
killing of Freddie Gray, the film focuses on a handful of people
working hard to repair things.
Police
captain Monique has 16 years on the job, but it’s her traumatic
Baltimore childhood, coming from a home of desperation, drugs, and
death, that informs her empathetic ways in uniform. In the poor,
neglected, drug-riddled Eastern District, a brawny local figure named
Alex — once targeted by racist officers, now a hard-working protégé to
revered neighborhood patriarch, Mr. C — channels his anger at the
injustice he sees every day into street-level programs that help kids,
and that interrupt tense street flare-ups before they lead to more
homicide statistics. Young, solution-minded city councilman Brandon
Scott, meanwhile, believes politics is where real change can occur. it is eye opening to watch.
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