ATTICA
(2021, Nelson & Curry)
A documentary

(2021, Nelson & Curry)
A documentary

"See what they did at Attica? Forty-two people they killed. The innocent with the guilty."
The above quote is not from this documentary, but from 1975's Dog Day Afternoon, from Sidney Lumet. Most people will quickly associate the name with the chants of Al Pacino's Sonny in the film; "ATTICA! ATTICA! ATTICA!" (it even made the AFI 100 Years, 100 Quotes list), but as far as I know, that was the extent of my knowledge about the prison or the riot that Sonny's referencing and that serves as the basis of this documentary.
Attica chronicles the events surrounding a riot at Attica Correctional Facility in 1971. Sparked by the prisoners requests for better living conditions, it quickly spiraled into a 4-day mess with 40+ hostages and heavy socio-political implications for those involved. The prison had a 75% "black and brown population" at the time, while the guard force was entirely white, and occurring a few years after the civil rights movement, it's expected that racial tension would play heavily into what happened.
To take us in the journey, directors Stanley Nelson and Traci Curry interview former prisoners, employees at the correctional facility, relatives of the hostages, mediators and negotiators, and reporters that covered the event. Not being entirely aware of the events, I really appreciated the way that they unfolded everything until its unfortunate ending. Not every documentary filmmaker has the ability to build up tension as the film progresses, but this is what happens here. You feel the burden of things mounting up, until they inevitably break down.
This documentary was one of five nominated for an Oscar this year, and when Chris Rock was introducing the category, he said something witty about how we "feel smarter" when we watch a documentary. Which is true, in the sense that we're learning something. But more than knowing the facts, I'm glad that we can watch this and be painfully aware of things like this. That we can look back at them, not as a catchy quote, but as a real tragedy that happened and impacted not only the community it happened, and the prison system as a whole, but the individuals that lived it.
Grade:
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