The Social Justice Film Festival opens at Northwest Film Forum, a nonprofit film and arts center that incites public dialogue and creative action through collective cinematic experiences.
Our featured event is Beyond Walls, a series of documentary films and panel discussion presentation that defines and amplifies what prison industrial complex (PIC) abolition means, while inspiring people to imagine and take action toward a world without policing. Beyond the goal of simply changing hearts and minds, these five short films show actions that can be taken to help create a world without police and prisons.
Discussion Participants
John Trafton, PhD
Professor, Film and Media Studies, Seattle University
Sam Hampton, PhD
Executive Director, Social Justice Film Festival
Christian Lee Collins
Filmmaker, What These Walls Won't Hold
Benjamin Abrams
Filmmaker, Calls From Home
Mara Henderson
Impact Coordinator, Working Films
Representatives from Restorative Community Pathways
RCP works to actively challenge how the legal system understands safety in our community. Rather than focusing on punishment, RCP recognizes that all individuals deserve healing and restoration.
The COVID-19 crisis inside California prisons has claimed the lives of over 200 incarcerated people and infected tens of thousands more. This film tracks the origins of COVID-19 inside the California state prison system and a newly formed coalition, led by currently and formerly incarcerated people, that brought forward an abolitionist framework to a life-or-death situation. What These Walls Won’t Hold explores how relationships, built on trust, shared liberatory struggle, and connections across broader abolitionist organizing work, can unfold into sites of resistance and radical change.
Our ideas about policing are shaped by our race, gender, class, and parents. The dominant culture, and mass media, sell us the image of “Officer Friendly.” But whose lived experience is that based on?
A short documentary about the reunion and repair between Mike Africa Jr. and his mother Debbie—a formerly incarcerated political prisoner of the MOVE. In 1978, Debbie, then 8 months pregnant, and many other MOVE family members were arrested after an attack by the Philadelphia Police Department; born in a prison cell, Mike Africa Jr. spent just three days with his mother before guards wrenched him away, and they spent the next 40 years struggling for freedom and each other. In 2018, Mike Africa Jr. successfully organized to have his parents released on parole. “I realized that I had never seen her feet before,” was a remark he made when he reflected on Debbie’s homecoming. This film meditates on Black family preservation as resistance against the brutal legacies of state-sanctioned family separation.
Sending people armed with guns to respond to mental health crises and public nuisance complaints is dangerous. It is often counterproductive and sometimes fatal. But what could take the place of policing? And in response to an epidemic of homicide, what are ways that we can keep our communities safer? In collaboration with artist Erik Ruin, Amistad Law Project staked out a creative path in lifting alternatives to policing. This video highlights the need to mobilize emergency resources for communities hardest hit by gun violence. We need to harness our creative energies to imagine the policies and programs that can replace policing and make us safer. We need to harness our creativity to communicate those ideas too.
In an intimate portrait of rural prison expansion, Calls from Home, documents WMMT-FM’s longstanding radio show that sends messages over the public airwaves to reach those incarcerated in Central Appalachia. For many, the show provides a lifeline to the world outside. Sharing the stories of the family and friends who call in, and those who listen in from prison, the film portrays the many forms of distance that rural prison building creates—and the ceaseless search to end this system of mass incarceration and family separation.