This was an incredible documentary! Arlo Washington is a leader in every sense of the word. He sees the economic disparity in Little Rock and the ways that neighborhoods have been redlined to disadvantage people of color. He notes that in an area with over 30,000 people, there are zero banks and the banks in the white neighborhoods won't make loans to people of color anyway. In addition to running a bank to help people launch businesses to create generational wealth, he also runs a barber school to help young people start their lives with a trade. He teaches them how to cut hair, but also how to launch a business, and most especially to value themselves and become more than their worst mistakes. This documentary is a must watch if you want to claim that there is no such thing as systemic racism, but it will also uplift you to know that there's someone who is not complaining and instead is doing something about it.
Now here was a fascinating short, through the eyes of a young filmmaker from Taiwan. Though he grew up primarily in the US, he moves back to Kinmen Island, just a few miles across the sea from China (you can literally see China from the shore) and how Taiwan's history of defending themselves against communism can be summarized in this one location. Here is one person who has three passports, but the one from Taiwan is considered illegal by the Chinese.
My favorite of the documentaries (and that is saying something, this year they were all so wonderful), this film follows the small repair shop in downtown Los Angeles that services and repairs the 80,000 instruments being used in LAUSD schools. The film features young students who find their voices through their instruments, and four of the repair workers who themselves have fascinating life stories. Kris Bowers (A Concerto is a Conversation... I'm still mad that film didn't win the Oscar, and of course the incredible composer of the movie Soul) is one of the producers, and he composes a finale piece for this film that assembles 80 musicians - both children who are in the LAUSD system today, and alumni from high schools all across Los Angeles. What an incredible gift for the school system to maintain its commitment to music education, something that school systems across the country are heartbreakingly abandoning.
Honestly, I'm not sure that this film is really an Oscars level movie, but it is engaging and adorable. Two grandmother best friends who live together make a film about their lives with their grandson (who moves in with them for a time). They are in their 80s and 90s, and have hilarious conversations about farts, they dress up and do skits, they dance, and they live their lives with so much joy. What a gift to their grandson was this whole endeavor, ending appropriately with him leaving their house and one turns to the other and says, "Frickin brat." This movie is all about joy.
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