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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Check this out. This Happened in America:,
By Lawrence Francis (Chicago, IL USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: American Revolution 2 (DVD)
This film just begins in the wake of violence and protest at the 1968 Democratic Convention, but it has a very different story to tell. It's set in Old Town, now a posh Chicago neighborhood, when the city is just beginning to set its sights on Old Town for a revitalization project. In 1968 a group of poor whites lived in Old Town who called themselves The Young Patriots. They had come from the Appalachian Mountains and are not shy about calling themselves "hillbillies." Like many poor white southerners they settled into flophouses and cheap apartments (they complain about rents of $140 per month) in Old Town and were often harrassed by the police. These poor whites are trying to connect with other radicalized groups to oppose the theft of their neighborhood by the rich. Some of the most amazing scenes are of meetings, the Young Patriots meeting with left-wing Christians at a Church of the Three Crosses, asking for their help to organize against the police and against capitalism. Recognizing their common plight, these middle-class white Christians and these hillbillies from Kentucky turn to who for wisdom? The Black Panthers. And the panthers, led by Robert E. Lee III, are these gorgeous, statuesque, perfectly disciplined and wonderfully articulate black men and women who are fonts of revolutionary wisdom, telling the whites that marches and demonstrations are a waste of time and that what they need to do is form strong communities that demand equality from the rich, at gunpoint if necessary. This happened in America, an America that America has forgotten, but it was not so long ago.
So the Panthers are very impressive. But then there are scenes giving voice to other black men in a South Side pool hall. These black men are saying, essentially, "We've been getting our heads busted by the cops for years but a few white boys get their heads busted and suddenly you're all down here talking about a revolution." And, "What do you care if a cop busts someone's head? I remember you when you were a kid on our street and you were busting people's heads. What do you care if a cop does the same thing?" It's true the film lacks background information and identifications, as another reviewer complained, but that's part of its brilliance. It simply immerses you back in 1968. And then you realize how different this country was just 40 years ago. Radically different.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Rough but fascinating look at street politics in 1968 Chicago,
This review is from: American Revolution 2 (DVD)
Very raw, rough documentary about the riots in Chicago at the 1968
Democratic convention, focusing on the unlikely alliance between the Black Panthers and a group of poor southern whites living in Chicago calling themselves the 'Young Patriots' - complete with confederate flags. Boring at moments, incoherent at others, but overall a fascinating capturing of a moment in history where there was the beginning of an understanding, now seemingly lost, that the real issue in America isn't race, but class. A valuable reminder that the politics of the 60s were more complex and messy than the cliché versions we see portrayed in modern popular culture.
3 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
A Rip Off,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: American Revolution 2 (DVD)
This film is a major disappointment. First, not all of the Special Features listed on the back of the jacket are available on the disk. On that basis alone it is not worth the money and I strongly object to the way it is being promoted. But this film is also seriously flawed.
The filmakers just assume that you understand the context of the demonstrations in Chicago in the summer of 1968. There is NO historical background information at all in the film itself with regards to the politics of Vietnan, the COINTELPRO program, the Democratic Convention, etc. No references made to other major events that went down right before the convention that year, i.e, the Tet Offensive, the murders of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy, Paris May/June '68, mass demonstrations going on all over the world...none of that is here. Neither is the aftermath: the Chicago 7 Trial is not mentioned at all; neither is the November elections, Nixon's deceptions about have a "secret plan" to end the war. What limited historical context that is provided is to be found in the little booklet that accompanies the film and even that is far from comprehensive. I object to productions where critical information is provided only in an accompanying booklet and then promoted as a Special Feature. That is lame. Special Features should augment a film, not take the place of it. What we end up with is a myopic view of what was going on at the street level and most of that is in the first part of the film where Dick Gregory's active role in the demonstration is the main thing worth watching. Do Not Be Deceived: this is not one long dramatic portrayal of one street demonstration after another. To the contrary, the rest of the film is nothing but meetings meetings meetings where we see the Young Patriots and Black Panthers trying to achieve a semblence of unity -- with limited success. Frankly, it reminds me of the worst of what happens at leftist meetings I used to attend: the pontificating, the strident remarks made, people shouting past each other, some of it barely audible because the sound quality of the recording is inadequate. Some of the louder activists are inaudible because their voices become distorted as they ventilate their spleen. That is why I am irritated when I see the description of this film as a "gritty" portrayal of what went on. Gritty is right. It is a barebones production with all the problems that kind of filmaking has to contend with and few of the positives. This is nothing but inside baseball for people who already have detailed knowledge of Chicago '68; just about worthless for anyone else who is trying to make sense of the '60's. Any redeaming value? The one special feature listed that was actually on the disc is a profile of the young Black Panther organizer Bobby Lee in a Where Are They Now type of featurette called "Organizer" which shows Lee and his brother El Franco Lee in their current political work in Houston, TX where they have been able to make an impact both in municipal government and out on the street. Mainly, this little feature provides some hope for radicals whose revolution died in the early 70's; evidence that some small victories can be achieved at the grassroots level despite the fact that the overall power equation was never altered one whit.
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