Movies that matter, at Forum

A group of high school students give up social media for 10 days. Another interviews local police about brutality. Still another wonders about the relationship between police and the Latino community.

Their findings, like those of students at two other high schools, are related in short documentary films to be shown at The Moviehouse in Millerton on Sunday, June 7, sponsored by The Salisbury Forum and The Moviehouse’s Millerton Movieworks.

The films are the result of a yearlong curriculum called the Civic Life Project, which uses the power of filmmaking to encourage students to select topics of community concern, research them, then conduct on-camera interviews and edit the hours of footage into a real film. 

Created by award-winning documentarians and experienced teachers in 2009, the curriculum has resulted in powerful films about high school rape, drug usage, government surveillance of citizens, even personal redemption by students after trouble with the law.

This year, students at the Marvelwood School in Kent became interested in the story of the Rev. James Manship, who was arrested in East Haven, Conn., for filming police harassment of Latinos. His case led to a federal investigation of the East Haven Police Department. 

Students interviewed Manship and other East Haven residents, then brought their research closer to home to discover what Torrington has done as a community to improve relations between police and the town’s growing Latino population. (For more on this film, see story here.)

In a different approach to police-community relations, Stamford Academy students produced a film based on their own experiences with the Stamford Police. Academy students are mostly minority, somewhat older, and many have overcome family and legal issues to continue their education. Their interviews with police and themselves are powerful, relevant and intensely honest.

Housatonic Valley Regional High School students will be showing a very personal film about medicating students for ADD/ADHD. Both a student in the filmmaking group, Madison Caruso, and her mother agreed to be interviewed about Madison’s own journey with the condition and the drugs. Students also interviewed Dr. William Graff, a Yale physician and nationally recognized expert on pediatric neurology.

Torrington students also considered drugs. They wondered if marijuana should be legalized in Connecticut and interviewed drug counselors, legislators, police officers, even a neurologist to better understand the issue. Their result is surprising.

Finally, the brave students at Monument Mountain Regional High School in Great Barrington, Mass., who gave up all social media for 10 days, have made a lighthearted film exploring the consequences of the media revolution. The young filmmakers recorded their own reactions to life without social media in nightly video journals, which are interspersed with interviews with a Time magazine reporter, an addiction expert and fellow students. The result is a film that is both intelligent and very funny.

The third annual Salisbury Forum-Millerton Movieworks presentation of Civic Life student films will be Sunday, June 7 at 11:30 a.m. at The Moviehouse. Some students will be present to answer questions, and the event is free and open to all. 

     

 

     

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