POV Tribeca Film Festival 2021
POV’s Season 34 Opener, THE NEUTRAL GROUND, Documents New Orleans’ Fight Over Monuments and America’s Troubled Romance with the Lost Cause

An official selection of the 2021 Tribeca Film Festival, THE NEUTRAL GROUND is the national broadcast premiere for the 34th Season of American Documentary | POV.  Director CJ Hunt’s debut feature documentary, executive produced by Roy Wood Jr. and produced by Darcy McKinnon. Premiere Monday July 5, 2021 on PBS at 9:30 p.m. ET and at pov.org. The film will also be available to stream for free at pov.org until August 4, 2021.

THE NEUTRAL GROUND begins in 2015 as Hunt documents a raucous New Orleans City Council meeting about the removal of four Confederate monuments. It quickly becomes apparent just how divided white and Black residents are on the meaning of the city’s statues. This tension between what to Hunt seems obvious – that the statues should be removed – and the fervor with which so many people oppose this view opens an opportunity for him to try and understand the mythology of the Confederacy and why Americans are willing to put so much on the line to guard its stone remnants.

When death threats halt the removals in New Orleans, Hunt hits the road, traveling across the South to try and understand why a losing army from 1865 still holds so much political and imaginative power in contemporary America. Through a mixture of investigative journalism and disarming humor, Hunt unravels America’s troubled romance with the “Lost Cause,” a romanticized and distorted interpretation of the war that ex-Confederates inserted into textbooks, films and the popular imagination.

“In any public debate about Confederate monuments, it’s only a matter of time before someone utters the tired claim: ‘the Civil War wasn’t about slavery.’ Those six words epitomize the daily gaslighting that Black people experience in America. We are told the racism we see with our own eyes is imaginary; that, historically speaking, it never really existed,” notes director CJ Hunt. “I made this film to help viewers fight against that gaslighting. Whatever textbooks you grew up reading, THE NEUTRAL GROUNDis an invitation to take a second look at the stories we were handed. We need to speak honestly about white supremacy – not as the rogue actions of bad men marching in the dark – but as the force that shapes every story we tell about America’s past.”

As the national monument controversy expands, Hunt’s journey includes visits with historians, activists and his own father. It brings him to Richmond’s Monument Avenue, the front lines of a Civil War reenactment, and finally into the ranks of Black reenactors bringing to life an 1811 slave rebellion to redefine what a “Southern rebel” looks like. At times darkly hilarious and at others soberingly serious, THE NEUETRAL GROUND is a poignant exploration of the legacy of slavery which much of America has yet to face.

Executive producer Roy Wood Jr. is quoted a saying, “This film tells the story of people courageously dragging this nation into a promising and progressive conversation about racial reckoning. It’s also the story of those who refuse to admit that this reckoning has arrived.” Raised in Birmingham, Alabama, a correspondent on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah and known as one of the country’s most incisive comedians on issues of race, Wood continues, “CJ’s approach to this topic ties into a much larger question facing America: How do we heal this nation’s deepest wounds when there are still so many people who won’t acknowledge those wounds exist?”

“Historically literate and intensely personal, The Neutral Ground is a critical contribution to the contemporary discussions around monuments, cultural preservation and racism that have intensified in the months during the worldwide protests for racial justice,” Erika Dilday Executive Producer of POV | Executive Director, American Documentary, is quoted as saying. “We knew this would be the right film to start the season.”

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Credits

Director: CJ Hunt. Screenwriter: CJ Hunt, Jane Geisler, James Hamilton. Producer: Darcy McKinnon. Executive Producer: Roy Wood Jr., Sally Jo Fifer. Editor: Jane Geisler. Cinematographer: Paavo Hanninen.Co-Producer: Jeremy Blum. Associate Producer: Katie Pham, Rachel Witwer, Jennifer Samani. Sound: Derek Rocque. Composer: Sultana Isham. Consulting Producer: Angela Tucker

U.S. Distribution: ITVS/POV

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About POV

Produced by American Documentary, POV is the longest-running independent documentary showcase on American television. Since 1988, POV has presented films on PBS that capture the full spectrum of the human experience, with a long commitment to centering women and people of color in front of, and behind, the camera. It was on POV that American television audiences were introduced to groundbreaking works like Tongues UntiedThe Act of Killing and American Promise and innovative filmmakers including Jonathan Demme, Nanfu Wang, and Laura Poitras. In 2018, POV Shorts launched as one of the first PBS series dedicated to bold and timely short-form documentaries.

Over a generation, POV has championed accessibility and innovation in nonfiction storytelling. POV Engage works with educators, community organizations and PBS stations to present hundreds of free screenings every year, inspiring dialogue around today’s most pressing social issues. The series’ interactive arm, POV Spark, creates and advances experiential forms of storytelling and programming, redefining U.S. public media to be more inclusive of emerging technologies and interactive makers.

The series’ decades-long experimentation with digital production and innovation for public media continues. Its most recent iteration, POV Spark (2017-2021) launched VR projects and the first shorts documentary series on Instagram Stories.

POV films and projects have won 42 Emmy Awards, 25 George Foster Peabody Awards, 14 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards, three Academy Awards and the first-ever George Polk Documentary Film Award. Learn more at pbs.org/pov and follow @povdocs on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook.

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About American Documentary

American Documentary, Inc. (AmDoc) is a multimedia company dedicated to creating, identifying and presenting contemporary stories that express opinions and perspectives rarely featured in mainstream media outlets. AmDoc is a catalyst for public culture, developing collaborative strategic engagement activities around socially relevant content on television, online and in community settings. These activities are designed to trigger action, from dialogue and feedback to educational opportunities and community participation.

Major funding for POV is provided by PBS, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Wyncote Foundation, Reva & David Logan Foundation, Open Society Foundations, Perspective Fund and the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional funding comes from Nancy Blachman and David desJardins, Bertha Foundation, The Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s Charitable Trust, Park Foundation, Sage Foundation, New York State Council on the Arts, public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, Chris and Nancy Plaut, Abby Pucker, Ann Tenenbaum and Thomas H. Lee and public television viewers. POV is presented by a consortium of public television stations, including KQED San Francisco, WGBH Boston and THIRTEEN in association with WNET.ORG.