LA’s violent uprising of 1992 returns to TV 25 years later
"If we don't change the way we interact with the police and they interact with us, y'all might as well just welcome the next riot," he says.
The juxtaposition of the historic uprising with today's high-profile police shootings of black men and the
Oscar winner
"Whether there are five, six or seven films, I don't think there can be enough stories," Ridley said in a recent interview. "It's almost stunning, considering the scope and scale of that event, what it meant in the moment and how people still view it, that it's taken this long for these stories to come out."
It's unusual to have six documentaries on the same subject released almost simultaneously, though it could become more commonplace in today's multi-option media landscape. By comparison, two films were released around the riots' 20th anniversary in 2012.
Since then,
"I look at the conditions across our country right now and I'm thinking we certainly didn't learn much in the last 25 years," retired
Besides the six documentaries marking the riots' anniversary, a digital story archive and a virtual-reality project aim to make sense of the events for today's viewers.
Anniversaries often inspire reflection, and the proliferation of outlets airing documentaries has created more opportunities for filmmakers interested in exploring the past, said
"As time passes, people look back on certain eras or events and reconsider them for a new age," Boyd said. "We're in a moment now where people are reconsidering that early '90s era, whether it's the Rodney King beating, the riots or O.J."
Those events all spoke to race relations, which may be as fractious now as they were then.
"I think that people just feel (the riots) are a really important cautionary tale right now," said
"This project is aiming to reach the millennials to make them understand the history of these places they're living in," she said.
Another interactive project, KTown92, focuses on stories about the riots from residents of Koreatown.
Documentarian Sacha Jenkins saw his film "Burn Motherf-----, Burn" as a way to establish historical context for today's police shootings and demands for justice.
"What I was trying to say with the film is this thing goes way back to slavery, and it goes way back to the grievances that African-Americans have had this whole time," he said. "I wanted people to be able to see this and do the math and let that math add up to where we are now."
Filmmaker
"Police abuse is as prevalent, if not more, than it was 25 years ago," Ford said. "We all see the images across our social media pretty much every day. As filmmakers, we just want to be part of the conversation as to why this is happening and what are potential solutions."
Singleton, a producer of "L.A. Burning" and an LA native, has been close to the riots for a long time. He left the
"This event affected all of us cross-culturally through the city," he said after a recent screening. "How can we learn from this so there's not another flash point?"
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