巴尔的摩暴动事件

  • Devin Allen Genard Shadow Barr Elijah Cummings
  • 120分钟
  •   In the wake of the 2015 death of F…   In the wake of the 2015 death of Freddie Gray in police custody, Baltimore was a city on the edge. Peaceful protests and destructive riots erupted in the immediate aftermath of Gray’s death, while the city waited to hear the fate of the six police officers involved in the incident, reflecting the deep divisions between authorities and the community -- and underscoring the urgent need for reconciliation.  Directed by Sonja Sohn (one of the stars of the HBO series The Wire), Baltimore Rising follows activists, police officers, community leaders and gang affiliates, who struggle to hold Baltimore together, even as the homicide rate hits record levels, and explores how to make change when change is hard.  The strife that grips Baltimore following the death of Freddie Gray exposes longstanding fault lines in a distraught and damaged community. Baltimore Rising chronicles the determined efforts of people on all sides who fight for justice and work to make their city better, sometimes coming together in unexpected ways, discovering a common humanity where before they often saw each other only as adversaries.  Among the key figures spotlighted in Baltimore Rising are:  Genard “Shadow” Barr (community leader, former gang member) is an addiction recovery specialist at the Penn-North Recovery Center, where he also helps organize a reentry jobs program for community members. Bridging the divide between police and residents of the Penn-North area, he works with all parties to mitigate violence. Barr is now working to open an entrepreneurship and job training center in West Baltimore.  Commissioner Kevin Davis has led the Baltimore Police Department since 2015. He took over as interim police commissioner in the aftermath of the uprising and surging violence, when the mayor fired previous commissioner Anthony Batts. A lifelong Marylander, Commissioner Davis is a 25-year veteran and fourth-generation public safety professional. He was faced with repairing public trust in the department and stemming a rising tide of homicides amidst the trials of his six officers.  Makayla Gilliam-Price (activist) founded the youth justice organization City Bloc as a high school student. She also organizes with the grassroots think-tank Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle.  Adam Jackson (activist) is CEO of the grassroots think-tank Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle. His efforts are aimed at connecting young people to public policy and creating transformative change in Baltimore.  Dayvon Love (activist), director of public policy for Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle, has deep experience with grassroots activism in the community. He has given numerous speeches and led workshops to give insight into the plight of its citizens.  Kwame Rose (activist), an artist, writer, musician and public speaker, gained notoriety during the uprising that followed Freddie Gray’s death for his public confrontation with FOX News reporter Geraldo Rivera. Arrested during protests outside the trials of the police officers charged in the Gray case, he recently accepted a position in the office of Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh.  Lt. Colonel Melvin Russell, chief of the Community Partnership Division, Baltimore Police Department, joined The Baltimore Police Department (BPD) in 1979 as a police cadet. He worked as a uniform patrol and then an undercover officer for 20 years before becoming an Eastern District Lieutenant in 2007. Recently he led the BPD’s chaplaincy program and worked cooperatively with such community leaders as Genard “Shadow” Barr to support a reentry jobs program and prevent another uprising during the police officers’ trials in the Gray case.  Dawnyell Taylor (police detective) has been with the Baltimore City Police for more than 16 years. In 2015 and 2016, she was the lead investigator in the Freddie Gray homicide case, and testified at the trial of Officer Caesar Goodson Jr., who was charged with Gray’s murder. Taylor continues to serve in the police academy in Baltimore.  The executive producers of Baltimore Rising are Sonja Sohn, Marc Levin, Anthony Hemingway, George Pelecanos and Mark Taylor; producer, Nathan Mook; supervising producers, Daphne Pinkerson and Kara Rozansky; directed by Sonja Sohn. For HBO: senior producer, Nancy Abraham; executive producer Sheila Nevins.
剧情简介
影片影评
经典台词
人物角色
《巴尔的摩暴动事件》由索尼娅·孙执导,2017年上映,影片以2015年美国巴尔的摩真实发生的弗雷迪·格雷事件为叙事核心,将镜头对准这座深陷种族矛盾、贫富分化与执法不公困境的工业城市。故事始于25岁的非裔青年弗雷迪·格雷在警方逮捕过程中脊椎重伤死亡,消息传开后,巴尔的摩西部社区率先爆发抗议,起初民众举着标语和平集会,要求警方公开真相、追责涉事警员,但随着对峙升级,部分抗议者开始投掷石块、焚烧警车,警方则出动防暴装备强制清场,冲突迅速蔓延至全市。影片没有单一主角,而是通过多线叙事串联起不同群体的命运:非裔单亲母亲玛莎的儿子曾被警方无故拦截,她一边担心参与抗议的小儿子安危,一边在社区里组织食物分发维持秩序;白人年轻警员杰克刚入职就卷入冲突,面对同事的种族偏见与抗议者的怒火陷入信仰崩塌;社区活动家卡门多年来致力于推动警务改革,却在暴力升级中失去了对局面的掌控。时代背景上,影片精准还原了后金融危机时代美国铁锈地带的衰败,巴尔的摩制造业外迁留下的失业率、教育资源匮乏与种族隔离的遗留问题,成为暴动爆发的深层土壤,镜头里废弃的工厂、涂满抗议标语的街道、被催泪弹笼罩的社区,共同构成了这场社会危机的真实图景。
《巴尔的摩暴动事件》是一部极具冲击力和反思深度的作品。剧本采用非线性结构,巧妙地将多个角色的故事编织在一起,使观众能够从不同角度理解这场社会风暴的复杂性。导演索尼娅·孙运用纪录片式的拍摄手法,结合真实的新闻片段和虚构的情节,增强了影片的真实感和代入感。演员们的表演自然且充满张力,尤其是年轻一代演员对情绪的把握非常精准,展现出强烈的社会责任感和艺术感染力。影片的历史价值不容忽视,它不仅是对2015年巴尔的摩事件的艺术再现,更是对美国社会结构性问题的深刻剖析。同时,影片也为后来的类似题材作品提供了重要的参考范本,推动了公众对种族正义和警务改革的关注与讨论。
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我不能眼睁睁看着我的朋友被他们这样对待。
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你们以为正义会自己到来?
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这不是关于一个人,而是关于整个制度。
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我只是想让事情变得更好一点。
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我们不是敌人,只是被逼到墙角的人。
玛莎
🎭演员:莎拉·琼斯
玛莎是巴尔的摩西部社区的非裔单亲母亲,独自抚养三个孩子,丈夫早年因涉毒入狱,她靠在超市做收银维持生计。这个角色是底层非裔女性的缩影,面对儿子的遭遇她对警方充满不信任,却始终不愿让家庭被仇恨吞噬,在抗议中一边保护孩子一边组织社区互助,她的坚韧与柔软让观众看见暴动背后普通人对安稳生活的渴望,也折射出种族矛盾对个体家庭的持久伤害。
杰克
🎭演员:瑞恩·墨菲
杰克是刚入职两年的白人警员,出身于中产家庭,抱着服务社区的理想加入警队,却在巴尔的摩暴动中遭遇信仰崩塌。他拒绝参与同事对少数族裔的无故拦截,却在冲突中被要求执行清场指令,角色的矛盾感精准呈现了体制内个体的困境,他的挣扎揭示了执法体系内部并非铁板一块,也暗示了改革需要从个体认知的松动开始。
卡门
🎭演员:阿曼达·罗德里格斯
卡门是社区活动家,深耕巴尔的摩基层十年,一直推动警务透明化改革,格雷事件爆发后她成为抗议者的精神领袖。她始终坚持非暴力原则,却在暴力升级中失去对局面的掌控,角色展现了社会运动中的理想主义困境,她的无力感并非个人的失败,而是结构性问题积重难返的体现,也让观众反思社会变革的复杂性与长期性。

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