PBS Distribution announced today it is releasing “JOHN LEWIS – GET IN THE WAY” for home entertainment on DVD. This is the first documentary biography of Lewis, whose unwavering fight for justice spans the past 50 years. The son of sharecroppers, Lewis grew up in rural isolation, seemingly destined for a bleak future in the Jim Crow South. But Lewis took a different path, rising from Alabama’s Black Belt to the corridors of power on Capitol Hill, his humble origins forever linking him to those whose voices often go unheard.
“JOHN LEWIS – GET IN THE WAY ” will be available on April 18, 2017. The run time of the DVD is approximately 60 minutes and its SRP is $24.99.
The program covers more than half a century, tracing Lewis’ journey of courage, confrontation and hard-won triumphs. At the age of 15, his life changed forever when he heard Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the radio. It was 1955, during the Montgomery Bus Boycott, and Lewis listened with rapt attention as the young preacher called for nonviolent resistance to the harsh injustice of segregation. Lewis embraced Dr. King’s spiritual call with a fervor that would transform the course of his life.
Showing posts with label civil rights movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil rights movement. Show all posts
Monday, March 13, 2017
Monday, April 11, 2016
Ken Burns: Jackie Robinson on DVD and BD on April 12
PBS Distribution announced it is releasing KEN BURNS’S: “JACKIE ROBINSON” on DVD and Blu-ray April 12, 2016, coinciding with its PBS airing. This new four hour documentary, directed by Ken Burns, Sarah Burns, and David McMahon, tells the story of Jack Roosevelt Robinson, who rose from humble origins to break baseball’s color barrier. Robinson waged a fierce lifelong battle for first-class citizenship for all African Americans that transcends even his remarkable athletic achievements.
The run time of the program is approximately 240 minutes on 2 discs. The SRP for the DVD is $24.99 and $29.99 for Blu-ray.
“Jackie Robinson is the most important figure in our nation’s most important game,” said Ken Burns recently. “He gave us our first lasting progress in civil rights since the Civil War and, ever since I finished my BASEBALL series in 1994, I’ve been eager to make a stand-alone film about the life of this courageous American. There was so much more to say not only about Robinson’s barrier-breaking moment in 1947, but about how his upbringing shaped his intolerance for any form of discrimination and how after his baseball career, he spoke out tirelessly against racial injustice, even after his star had begun to dim.”
The run time of the program is approximately 240 minutes on 2 discs. The SRP for the DVD is $24.99 and $29.99 for Blu-ray.
“Jackie Robinson is the most important figure in our nation’s most important game,” said Ken Burns recently. “He gave us our first lasting progress in civil rights since the Civil War and, ever since I finished my BASEBALL series in 1994, I’ve been eager to make a stand-alone film about the life of this courageous American. There was so much more to say not only about Robinson’s barrier-breaking moment in 1947, but about how his upbringing shaped his intolerance for any form of discrimination and how after his baseball career, he spoke out tirelessly against racial injustice, even after his star had begun to dim.”
Wednesday, February 17, 2016
Ken Burns' JACKIE ROBINSON to DVD / BD in April
PBS
Distribution announced today it is releasing KEN BURNS’S: “JACKIE ROBINSON”
on DVD and Blu-ray April 12, 2016, coinciding with its PBS airing. This
new four hour documentary, directed by Ken Burns, Sarah Burns, and David
McMahon, tells the story of Jack Roosevelt Robinson, who rose from humble
origins to break baseball’s color barrier. Robinson waged a fierce lifelong
battle for first-class citizenship for all African Americans that transcends
even his remarkable athletic achievements.
Born
in 1919 to tenant farmers in rural Georgia and raised in Pasadena, California,
Robinson challenged institutional racism long before he integrated Major League
Baseball. As a teenager, he demanded service at a Woolworth’s lunch counter and
refused to sit in the segregated balcony at a local movie theater. In 1944, while serving as a second lieutenant in the U.S.
Army, Robinson was arrested after he defied an order from a civilian bus driver
to move to the back of a military bus. He was found not guilty.
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