Nine from Little Rock (1965) Poster

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understand it in context
lee_eisenberg26 January 2016
Charles Guggenheim's Oscar-winning "Nine from Little Rock" looks at the nine African-American students who enrolled in Little Rock Central High School in 1957, only to see the governor prevent them from entering. Eisenhower sent in the troops to escort the nine students into the school, but there's more to the story. The documentary is narrated by Jefferson Thomas, one of the students. He reflects on the state of race relations in the seven years that had elapsed, and also looks at fellow students Ernest Green and Thelma Mothershed.

It's important to understand the context of the event. The white people who tried to prevent the black students from entering believed that they were doing the right thing by keeping non-white people out of the school. As far as the state governments in the south were concerned, Martin Luther King was an extremist. The Civil Rights Movement led to the third rise of the Ku Klux Klan. The shooting in the South Carolina church last year (might we call it a terrorist attack?) was because the perpetrator thought that "blacks are taking over". Never let yourself get fooled when these people talk about the "good old days".

Anyway, it's a good documentary. I'd say that it deserved its Oscar win, although I haven't seen 1964's other nominees. Charles Guggenheim's son Davis directed "An Inconvenient Truth".
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