Directed by Raoul Peck
ALL SCREENINGS ARE SOLD OUT
Friday, February 17, 7 pm
Jaison Gardner, Black Lives Matter-Louisville, Co-Founder and Dr. Kaila Story, Pan African Studies Department, UofL
Saturday, February 18, 3 pm
Sadiqa Reynolds, Executive Director, Urban League-Louisville
Saturday, February 18, 7 pm
Dr. Kevin Cosby, Senior Pastor, St. Stephen Church; President Simmons College of Kentucky
Sunday, February 19, 3 pm
Dr. David Anderson, Associate Professor, Department of English, UofL
Wednesday, February 22, 6 pm
There will be no formal post-screening discussion for the 6 pm screening due to time constraints in turning around the two sold-out screenings.
Wednesday, February 22, 8 pm
Jaison Gardner, Black Lives Matter-Louisville, Co-Founder and Dr. Kaila Story, Pan African Studies Department, UofL
Friday, February 24, 7 pm
Ricky L. Jones, Ph.D., Professor and Chair, Pan African Studies Department, UofL
Saturday, February 25, 12 pm
Jaison Gardner, Black Lives Matter-Louisville, Co-Founder and Dr. Kaila Story, Pan African Studies Department, UofL
Saturday, February 25, 3 pm
Dr. Brandy N. Kelly Pryor, Director, Center for Health Equity, Department of Public Health and Wellness
Saturday, February 25, 7 pm
Jaison Gardner, Black Lives Matter-Louisville, Co-Founder and Dr. Kaila Story, Pan African Studies Department, UofL
Sunday, February 26, 3 pm
Janae Hall, Graduate Student, Pan African Studies Department, UofL
“One of the best movies you are likely to see this year.” —Manohla Dargis, New York Times
Nominated for the Best Documentary Oscar, this incendiary new film envisions the book on the Civil Rights movement, Remember This House, that James Baldwin had planned to write and expands on his work, bringing the story to the present of #BlackLivesMatter. The book was to be a revolutionary, personal account of the lives and successive assassinations of three of his close friends—Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Director Raoul Peck draws on this material to create a radical, up-to-the-minute examination of race in America that draws on Baldwin’s 30-page manuscript along with intensive archival material showing how the issues of Baldwin’s times are still valid and pressing today.
A selection of the Toronto International Film Festival and the New York Film Festival. 2016, U.S., DCP, 93 minutes. Rated PG-13.
Select screenings will include an introduction and post-screening discussion led by key members of the Louisville community.
Co-presented with the Urban League-Louisville.
Friday Film Happy Hour: Thanks to Wiltshire at the Speed, the first drink is included in your ticket purchase and offered from 6–7 pm before Friday evening screenings.
Related Event:
Empowerment: Making and Shaping History
Gheens Science Hall and Rauch Planetarium, University of Louisville
Free
One hour prior to each I Am Not Your Negro scheduled screening.
In honor of Black History Month 2017, the Gheens Science Hall and Rauch Planetarium is offering programming designed to educate, inspire and empower us to make and shape history. Virtually participate in recent #BlackLivesMatter (#BLM) events as we immerse you in 360° video filmed around the country. Discussion following the viewing will provide participants with an array of opportunities to make and shape history with whatever means available—whether it be time, money, and/or day-to-day interactions. Program length: approximately 30 minutes.