Whose Streets?
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Partisan
Polemic Revisits Mike Brown Shooting in Ferguson, Missouri
On
August 9, 2014, Mike Brown was shot a half-dozen times by police
officer Darren Wilson on the streets of Ferguson, Missouri, a
predominantly-black suburb of St. Louis. Because several eyewitnesses
said the 18 year-old had his hands up at the time, the incident
triggered nationwide civil unrest which gave rise to the Black Lives
Matter movement.
But
Wilson was not even indicted by the grand jury which deemed his
testimony credible. He claimed to have pulled the trigger in self
defense after Brown had punched him and tried to grab his gun. The
legal case divided the country along color lines in the same way as
the O.J. Simpson trial, with African-Americans generally feeling that
cops are too quick to shoot young black men, and most whites being
inclined to give law enforcement the benefit of the doubt.
Co-directed
by Damon Davis and Sabaah Folayan, Whose
Streets? is an incendiary documentary which revisits the tragedy in
partisan fashion, arguing entirely in favor of Brown's innocence
while conveniently ignoring the mountain of evidence which ultimately
exonerated Wilson. Granted, this provocative polemic might serve as a
Black Lives Matter recruiting tool, but it is likely to be of little
value to any truth seeker interested in an impartial investigation.
After
all, there was video proof that Brown and Dorian Johnson had robbed a
convenience store just 3 minutes before the encounter with Wilson who
was summoned to the scene by a police dispatcher. Furthermore, the
county, federal and independent autopsies corroborated the cop's
story while simultaneously refuting Johnson's claim that his
accomplice had been shot in the back and with his hands up. After an
exhaustive investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice, even
Attorney General Eric Holder concluded that Wilson was innocent.
So,
what's dismaying about Whose Streets? is how its presentation of a
thief as an altar boy flies in the face of Dr. Martin Luther King's
appeal that black people be judged not by the color of their skin but
by the content of their character. Why make Mike Brown the poster
child for the Black Lives Matter movement, when there are so many
martyrs far more deserving, like Trayvon Martin, Jordan Davis and
Tamir Rice, to name a few?
A
soulful cinematic sermon elevating a sinner to sainthood for the sake
of an uncritical Amen choir still in denial about the truth of the
Mike Brown case!
Rated R for ethnic slurs, mature themes and pervasive profanity
Running time: 101 minutes
Distributor: Magnolia Pictures
To see a trailer for Whose Streets?, visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-AS1-QmQ93Y
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