Mumia: Long Distance Revolutionary (DVD REVIEW)
Mumia: Long Distance
Revolutionary
DVD Review
by Kam Williams
Reverential Documentary Sidesteps Question of Cause Celebre’s Innocence or
Guilt
Wesley Cook, aka Mumia Abu-Jamal,
was born on April 24, 1954 in the City of Brotherly
Love. There, he founded a branch of the Black Panthers
at the age of 15 after being kicked by a cop at a rally for segregationist
presidential candidate George Wallace.
After attending college in Vermont, he returned to
Philly to pursue a career in journalism. He proceeded to provide a voice for
the voiceless as a politically-progressive reporter while simultaneously
moonlighting as a cab driver, until the fateful night in 1981 when he and his
brother William crossed paths with a police officer named Daniel Faulkner.
The cop was killed during the
traffic stop, when the bullets from a gun registered to Mumia were emptied into
him at close range. Faulkner managed to get off a few shots, wounding Mumia.
At trial, the jury deliberated only
a few hours in what seemed like an open-and-shut case, and the defendant was
convicted and subsequently handed a death sentence. However, because of Mumia’s
previously clean record and his having served as such an articulate mouthpiece
for the poor and disenfranchised, he soon became something of an international
cause célèbre.
Was he indeed a murderer or had he
been railroaded to prison because of his radical views? The left and the right
would disagree strongly on the issue. Eventually his sentence was commuted to
life with no parole, and the fundamental question of guilt or innocence was
essentially left unanswered.
The same can be said after viewing Mumia: Long Distance Revolutionary, a
documentary which doesn’t seek so much to clear the controversial figure’s name
as to showcase his intellect and longstanding defiance of The
Establishment.
To director Stephen Vittoria’s credit, he hauls out a long line of luminaries
like Dr. Cornel West, Ruby Dee, Hurricane Carter, Alice Walker, Angela Davis,
Dick Gregory and Amy Goodman to take turns heaping praise on his sympathetic
subject.
While their heartfelt testimonials
leave no doubt about Mumia’s commitment to the struggle and considerable
talents as a writer, none of them were eyewitnesses to the murder. Thus, this
is not a biopic which seeks to poke holes in the prosecution’s case or to
indict the State of Pennsylvania
for a rush to judgment.
Rather, it merely endeavors to
highlight the squandered potential of a gifted, if fatally-flawed individual.
Love him or hate him, no one watching this inconclusive piece can deny that
Mumia has a way with words.
A film that wisely leaves the
damning evidence on the back burner in favor of focusing on everything about
Mumia Abu-Jamal except for what exactly transpired at the corner of 13th
and Locust in the wee hours of December 9, 1981.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Unrated
In English and
Spanish with subtitles
Running time: 120 minutes
Distributor: First
Run Features
DVD Extras: A short
film entitled “Manufacturing Guilt.”
To see a trailer for Mumia: Long Distance Revolutionary,
visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJUMKrwAYJk
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