Human Rights Watch Film Festival New York Digital 2020 – In These Times of the Pandemic & Vicious Police Attacks of Innocent Protestors and Black People

Never Forgetting George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Botham Jean, Stephon Clark, Philando Castie … The List Goes On and On and …

Thursday, June 11 – Saturday, June 20, 2020 – First full digital edition. Co-presented by IFC Center, one of the festival’s long-time cinema venue partners, HRWFF will again feature in-depth online discussions with filmmakers, film subjects, and Human Rights Watch researchers.

Available to screen across the America, the 11 films in this year’s festival are truly global in scope, and present an overriding message of hope, from reform of the criminal justice system in the United States to the fight for reproductive rights in Ireland and the re-framing of long-suppressed yet ever powerful indigenous voices in Peru and North America. The Festival is excited to share films that reflect a resounding global rallying cry: The will of the people shall not be ignored.

Complete program below.

Tickets, $9 for general public, $8 for IFC Center members. A festival pass, good for all 11 films in the lineup, $70. Access to screenings will be available during the film festival dates of June 11-20, 2020. Audiences also have the opportunity to join free, live online Q&A’s with the filmmakers, Human Rights Watch experts and special guests.

To purchase tickets, for film and Q&A details, and to access program updates, click the individual film titles below or visit https://www.hrwfilmfestivalstream.org/ .

The festival plans to return to IFC Center in 2021 and beyond.

 


 

BELLY OF THE BEAST — Opening Night
Dir. Erika Cohn, USA, 2020, documentary, 82 min.
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Thursday, June 11, 8 p.m. (EDT)
A courageous young woman and a radical lawyer discover a pattern of illegal involuntary sterilizations in California’s women’s prison system, and they take to the courtroom to wage a near-impossible battle against the Department of Corrections.

THE 8TH
Dir. Aideen Kane, Lucy Kennedy, Maeve O’Boyle, USA/Ireland, 2020, documentary, 94 min.
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Friday, June 19, 7pm (EDT)
Capturing a crucial moment for women’s rights, The 8th tells the incredible story of how the Republic of Ireland overturned one of the world’s most restrictive laws on abortion.

CODED BIAS
Dir. Shalini Kantayya, USA/UK/China/South Africa, 2020, documentary, 85 min.
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Friday, June 12, 8pm (EDT)
When MIT Media Lab researcher Joy Buolamwini discovers that most facial-recognition software misidentifies women and darker-skinned faces, as a woman of color working in a field dominated by white males, she is compelled to investigate further. Official Selection, Sundance Film Festival

DOWN A DARK STAIRWELL
Dir. Ursula Liang, USA, 2020, documentary, 83 min. In English, Cantonese and Mandarin with English subtitles
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Wednesday, June 17, 8pm (EDT)
When a Chinese-American police officer kills an innocent, unarmed black man in an unlit stairwell of a New York City housing project on November 20, 2014, communities across the city erupt with demands for legal accountability.

FROM HERE
Dir. Christina Antonakos-Wallace, USA, 2020, documentary, 89 min. In English, German, Spanish, Punjabi, Romani, Vietnamese with English subtitles
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Sunday, June 14, 8pm (EDT)
From Here is a hopeful story of Tania, Sonny, Miman, and Akim – artists and activists based in Berlin and New York whose lives and futures hang in the balance of immigration and integration debates.

GATHER — Closing Night
Dir. Sanjay Rawall, USA, 2020, documentary, 74 min.
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Saturday, June 20, 8pm (EDT)
Gather celebrates the fruits of the indigenous food sovereignty movement, profiling innovative changemakers in Native American tribes across North America reclaiming their identities after centuries of physical and cultural genocide.

I AM SAMUEL
Dir. Peter Murimi, Kenya/Canada/UK/USA, 2020, documentary, 69 min. In Swahili, English, Luhya with English subtitles
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Sunday, June 14, 3:30pm (EDT)
Samuel grew up on a farm in the Kenyan countryside, where tradition is valued above all else. He moves to Nairobi in search of a new life, where he finds belonging in a community of fellow queer men. Filmed over five years, I Am Samuel is an intimate portrait of a Kenyan man balancing pressures of family loyalty, love and safety while questioning the concept of conflicting identities.

MAXIMA
Dir. Claudia Sparrow, USA/Peru, 2019, documentary, 88 min. In English, Spanish with English subtitles
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Tuesday, June 16, 8pm (EDT)
Maxima tells the incredible story of 2016 environmental Goldman Prize winner Máxima Acuña and her family. The Acuñas rely solely on the environment for their livelihood, but their land sits directly in the path of a multi-billion-dollar project run by one of the world’s largest gold-mining corporations. Winner Audience Award for a Feature Film, Hot Docs

RADIO SILENCE
Dir. Juliana Fanjul, Switzerland/Mexico, 2019, documentary, 79 min. In Spanish with English subtitles
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Saturday, June 14, 4pm (EDT)
To millions of people in Mexico, the incorruptible journalist and news anchor Carmen Aristegui is regarded as the trusted alternative voice to official government spin, fighting daily against deliberate disinformation spread through news sources, government corruption, and the related drugs trade.

REUNITED
Dir. Mira Jargil, Denmark/Sweden, 2020, documentary, 78 min. In English, Danish, Arabic with English subtitles
Live online Q&A with filmmaker and guests on Saturday, June 20, 3:30pm (EDT)
This is a story of love across borders, and the compromises a family must make when it is torn apart by circumstances beyond its control.

WELCOME TO CHECHYNA
David France, USA, 2020, documentary, 107 min. In English, Russian with English subtitles
Live online Q&A on Saturday, June 13, 8pm (EDT) with filmmaker David France, author, journalist, & columnist at The New Yorker Masha Gessen, and other guests
A searing documentary directed by acclaimed writer and Oscar®-nominated director David France (HOW TO SURVIVE A PLAGUE,

THE DEATH AND LIFE OF MARSHA P. JOHNSON shadows a group of brave activists risking their lives to confront the ongoing anti-LGBTQ campaign in the Russian republic of Chechnya. Courtesy of HBO Documentary Films. Winner, U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Editing, Sundance Film Festival

 

 

Gregg W. Morris can be reached at gregghc@comast.net and profgreggwmorris@gmail.com