Still from Trick Bag
Still from Trick Bag
 

On Demand

Trick Bag

par Kartemquin Collective
Des habitants de Chicago de tous horizons répondent à la question suivante : qui souffre et qui profite du racisme ?
1974  ·  26m  ·  United States
Anglais
À propos du film

Des membres de gangs, des vétérans du Vietnam et de jeunes ouvriers des quartiers de Chicago racontent leur expérience personnelle du racisme : qui en pâtit et qui en profite. Le film a été présenté à Kartemquin par Peter Kuttner, et les crédits sont partagés entre Kartemquin, Rising Up Angry et Columbia College Chicago.

Copie originale en 16 mm restaurée en 2011 grâce à une subvention de la National Film Preservation Foundation.

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Festivals et prix
1976
Festival Del Popoli (Florence, Italy), Official Selection
Berlin Film Festival, Official Selection
FilmEx (Los Angeles), Certificate of Merit
Leipzig Film Festival, Certificate of Merit
Revolutionary Film Festival (SAIC), Official Selection
The Great Lakes Film Festival, Official Selection
Cinéastes
Kartemquin Films, Rising Up Angry, Columbia College
À propos du cinéaste

Kartemquin Collective

It all started in 1966 with a camera, a verite film, Home for Life, and three friends (Stan Karter, Jerry Temaner, and Gordon Quinn) coming together and deciding to take a risk to “try to make something happen.” And make something happen they did. The collective they formed has been home to over 200 filmmakers who have influenced the field of documentary filmmaking for over five decades, examining and critiquing society through the stories of real people.

The original collective dissolved in the late 1970s and was reimagined as a production company by Gordon Quinn and Jerry Blumenthal, who continued the founders’ legacy under the Kartemquin name, a moniker that often requires as much explanation as help in its pronunciation. Learn more about the name’s origin story.

Much of the work of the 1970s and 1980s focused on social-issue documentaries, producing high quality work and mentoring the next generation of documentary filmmakers. In the mid-1990s, one of Kartemquin’s best-known films, Hoop Dreams, won several major awards and ushered in a decade of documentaries that garnered accolades from critics and audiences nationally and internationally including Grassroots Chicago and Vietnam Long Time Coming. The 2010s brought more notable works to the screen, including The InterruptersThe Trials of Muhammad Ali, and Raising Bertie, and a reinforced commitment to nurturing the next generation of talent. In 2013, the cohort model for Diverse Voices in Documentary came to life as a way of supporting historically underrepresented filmmakers.

With four Academy Award nominations, six Emmy awards, and four Peabody awards, Kartemquin has been described by the Chicago Reader as a “documentary powerhouse,” but it is the recognition for outstanding service to the film community and awards like the Altgeld Freedom of Speech Award for “unflinchingly holding up a mirror to American society” that reflect our deepest purpose. In 2019, that commitment to mission was celebrated by an Institutional Peabody Award for Kartemquin’s “commitment to unflinching documentary filmmaking and telling an American history rooted in social justice and the stories of the marginalized.”

 

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