Events

Hale County This Morning, This Evening, Screening and Q&A

Location:

The Rosenwald (Vassar Center for Drama and Film 109)

Director RaMell Ross and Producer Joslyn Barnes will join the Film Department at a screening of Hale County This Morning, This Evening followed by a conversation between the filmmakers.

How does one express the reality of individuals whose public image, lives, and humanity originate in exploitation? Photographer and filmmaker RaMell Ross employs the integrity of nonfiction filmmaking and the currency of stereotypical imagery to fill in the gaps between individual black male icons. Hale County This Morning, This Evening is a lyrical innovation to the form of portraiture that boldly ruptures racist aesthetic frameworks that have historically constricted the expression of African American men on film.

In the lives of protagonists Daniel and Quincy, quotidian moments and the surrounding southern landscape are given importance, drawing poetic comparisons between historical symbols and the African American banal. Images are woven together to replace narrative arc with visual movements. As Ross crafts an inspired tapestry made up of time, the human soul, history, environmental wonder, sociology, and cosmic phenomena, a new aesthetic framework emerges that offers a new way of seeing and experiencing the heat, and the hearts of people in the Black Belt region of the U.S. as well as far beyond.

Sponsored by The Katharine Stone White Film Artist in Residence Endowment.

A a still from the film Hale County This Morning, This Evening featuring one of the subjects, a person crouching while standing on the saddle of a horse.
Still image from Hale County This Morning, This Evening (The Cinema Guild)