Raising Bertie | |
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Directed by | Margaret Byrne |
Produced by |
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Cinematography | Jon Stuyvesant |
Edited by | Leslie Simmer |
Music by | Eric Andrew Kuhn |
Production companies |
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Distributed by | Kartemquin Films |
Release date |
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Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Raising Bertie is a 2016 American documentary film directed by Margaret Byrne and produced by Ian Robertson Kibbe, Margaret Byrne, and Jon Stuyvesant. It was distributed by Kartemquin Films and aired in shortened form on the 30th season of PBS's documentary series POV on August 28, 2017. [1]
North Carolina native and Grammy-nominated rapper J. Cole is one of the executive producers of the film. [2]
Raising Bertie premiered at Full Frame Documentary Film Festival in 2016, and subsequently screened at 25 more festivals. [3] The film won multiple awards including the Documentary Feature Special Jury Award at the Atlanta Film Festival, [4] Best Director at the Atlanta Underground Film Festival, [5] Best Documentary Feature at Atlanta Docufest, [6] and Best First Time Director at the Downtown Film Festival Los Angeles [7]
Critically, the film has been well received. [8] Kimber Myers of the Los Angeles Times called the film an "impressive directorial debut ... alternates between triumph and tragedy, but there's never a moment that doesn't feel intimate and authentic." [9] In IndieWire, Bryn Gelbart called the film "astounding and powerful." [10] Alan Scherstuhl from The Village Voice called the film "essential ... Charts nothing less than what it's like to try to grow up free in the prison capital of the world," [11] and Scott Pfeiffer of The Moving World said the film "deserves a place beside the great achievements in longitudinal film." [12]
Miriam Di Nunzio of the Chicago Sun-Times said the film "powerfully drives home what is obvious and yet what most of us fail to see: Bertie County is America. It's Chicago. It's Detroit. It's Los Angeles. It's a portrait of communities and families striving to do right by their kids, but where schools and lack of job programs fail to meet communities' most desperate needs." [13] Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com said "I never would have heard of Bertie, North Carolina if it weren't for this movie, and using art to learn about every corner of our country seems more essential than ever." [14]
Sheri Linden of The Hollywood Reporter said "the experiences and challenges of the rural poor might make it into the national conversation as an abstraction, but rarely with the specificity of this intimate portrait of a black community." [15] Brian C. Bush of The Huffington Post called the film "starkly poetic" and said it "brilliantly weaves the young men's stories together, as they transition from their teens into manhood, engaged in a shared struggle for social and economic survival." [16]
Executive Producer Gordon Quinn said of the film, "Raising Bertie challenges us to see the value in lives too often ignored, those of rural America and emerging adults." [17]
Hoop Dreams is a 1994 American documentary film directed by Steve James, and produced by Frederick Marx, James, and Peter Gilbert, with Kartemquin Films. It follows the story of two African-American high school students, William Gates and Arthur Agee, in Chicago and their dream of becoming professional basketball players.
Steve James is an American film producer and director of several documentaries, including Hoop Dreams (1994), Stevie (2002), and Abacus: Small Enough to Jail (2016).
Kartemquin Films is a four-time Oscar-nominated 501(c)3 non-profit production company located in Chicago, Illinois, that produces a wide range of documentary films. It is the documentary filmmaking home of acclaimed producers such as Gordon Quinn, Steve James, Peter Gilbert, Maria Finitzo, Joanna Rudnick, Bing Liu, Aaron Wickenden, and Ashley O’Shay (Unapologetic).
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Jonathan Messer is an Australian director of theatre, television and film.
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Gabe Polsky is an American film director, writer and producer.
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Judy Hoffman is an American filmmaker and arts activist based in Chicago. She graduated from Northwestern University with a MFA and currently holds a faculty position at the University of Chicago. Hoffman has played a major role in the development of Kartemquin Films, a documentary filmmaking company founded in Chicago in 1966. Hoffman has worked with extensively with Kwakwaka’wakw, a First Nation in British Columbia, to produce films. Hoffman has brought activism to her films, and continues to show different facets of the city of Chicago.
On Beauty is a 2014 short documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films. It follows the story of Rick Guidotti, a fashion photographer who in 1998 decided to quit the fashion industry to found a nonprofit based on promoting diversity and acceptance.
Almost There is a 2014 independent documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films. It was directed by Aaron Wickenden and Dan Rybicky.
O.J.: Made in America is a 2016 American documentary, produced and directed by Ezra Edelman for ESPN Films and their 30 for 30 series. It was released as a five-part miniseries and in theatrical format. The documentary explores race and celebrity through the life of O. J. Simpson, from his emerging football career at the University of Southern California, and his celebrity and popularity within American culture, to his trial for the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Lyle Goldman, and subsequent acquittal, and how he was convicted and imprisoned for the Las Vegas robbery 13 years later. O.J.: Made in America premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 22, 2016, and was theatrically released in New York City and Los Angeles in May 2016. It debuted on ABC on June 11, 2016, and aired on ESPN.
Unbroken Glass is a 2016 independent documentary film, directed by Dinesh Das Sabu and produced by Kartemquin Films. Unbroken Glass weaves together Das Sabu’s journey of discovery with cinéma vérité scenes of his family dealing with still raw emotions and consequences of his immigrant parents’ lives and deaths. The film was shot over five years in Illinois, New Mexico, California, and India.
Mark Simon Wexler is an American documentary filmmaker and photojournalist.
Edith+Eddie is a 2017 American documentary film directed by Laura Checkoway and produced by Thomas Lee Wright. It was distributed by Kartemquin Films. When singer and entertainer Cher learned about the couple from a local news story, she offered to pay for repairs to the couple's home as well as Edith's medical bills. Cher is also the executive producer of the documentary film. It was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject at the 90th Academy Awards.
Peter Kuttner is a Chicago filmmaker, activist, and cameraman. He is known for his early socially-conscious documentary films that touch on topics such as opposition to United States involvement in the Vietnam War, gentrification of Chicago, racism, and social class. He produced many of these with the film collective Kartemquin Films, of which he was an original member. He is best known for his work on the film The End of the Nightstick (1993) with Cindi Moran and Eric Scholl, which documented police brutality in Chicago and torture allegations against commander Jon Burge. Kuttner has worked extensively in activism and community service, and was a founding member of activist group Rising Up Angry. Kuttner has worked with many collaborators including Kartemquin Collective founder Gordon Quinn, and filmmakers Haskell Wexler and Robert Kramer. He is also known for camera work on a number of major motion pictures including Man of Steel and Source Code.
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