A CRIME ON THE BAYOU

An Augusta Films Production

In association with Get Lifted Film Company and Artemis Rising Foundation

Directed by Nancy Buirski

Produced by Nancy Buirski, Susan Margolin and Claire Chandler

2020 World Premiere, DOCNYC

“Directed by Nancy Buirski and exec-produced by John Legend, it raises the bar for other documentaries in the way it’s seamlessly and beautifully executed.”

-New York Amsterdam News

“‘A Crime on the Bayou’ is required viewing…It’s infuriating and inspiring.”

-Reel News Daily

“Thoughtful and illuminating…”

-The Hollywood Reporter

"Buirski’s 90-minute film, “A Crime on the Bayou,” reminds us how Duncan and Sobol are pillars of courage. Sound tracked by Chet Baker and Miles Davis’ easeful compositions, the film has a disarming gentle pacing. Likewise the archival work is simply stunning."

-The Los Angeles Times

"Nancy Buirski’s vivid documentary examines a 1966 Louisiana incident that underlined the absurdities of Southern racial injustice..."

-Variety

"Filmmaker Nancy Buirski has an elegant, judicious way of imparting the facts of the case, taking not just the political temperature of the moment (boiling) but finely sketching the character and minds of the people involved. Duncan’s bond with Sobol is a study in moral brotherhood."

-RogerEbert.com

TESTIMONIALS

From time to time I come across a work that speaks to the tumultuous events of the day, bringing clarity and a new way of seeing to the chaos and confusion. A Crime on the Bayou is one of those works. This film speaks directly to the issues in front of us – White Supremacy, individual bravery, the rule of law, democracy. But its heartbeat is the profound alliance between a Black teen on trial, and his young Jewish attorney. This allyship is what moved me the most.

  • John Legend

Nancy Buirski, the distinguished maker of films about remarkable and outspoken people, uses her compassion and understanding of human nature to present a compelling story rippling into many aspects of American society and vividly presents a history that should be seen and appreciated by those who believe in due process - lawmakers, teachers, educators, students and truth tellers everywhere.      

  • Laurence Kardish

Former Senior Curator, MoMA

Just finished watching Crime on the Bayou!! . . . it is beautifully done . . . As I suspected you nailed it.  Congratulations!!  

  • Crystal Feimster

Assoc Prof African American Studies, Yale


This is the first Civil Rights film I've ever seen where the goodness overcomes the evil. The relationship between Gary Duncan and Richard Sobol makes you feel there's hope for humanity. Exceptional people telling an exceptional story, in an exceptional film.

  • Sheila Nevins

MTV Studios

I just watched the film. Wow!  I’m really moved by it...I had to write now to say thank you for this. I needed this film right now. 

  • Simon Kilmurry

Executive Director, IDA

OUR TEAM

DIRECTOR

Nancy Buirski

PRODUCED BY

Nancy Buirski

Susan Margolin

Claire L. Chandler

CONSULTING PRODUCERS

Laurens Grant

Sam Pollard

EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS

John Legend

Regina K. Scully

Austyn Biggers 

Geralyn Dreyfous

Harlene Freezer

Jules Horowitz

Felicia Horowitz

Mike Jackson

Brenda Robinson

Ty Stiklorius

Amy Tiemann

Mark Trustin

Jamie Wolf

CO-EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS

Rev. Derrick Harkins

Una Jackman & Jay Alix

CO-PRODUCER

Vanessa Martino

ARCHIVAL PRODUCER

Hannah Shepard

DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY

Rex Miller

EDITOR

Anthony Ripoli

SALES AGENT

Jessica Lacy, ICM Partners

jessica.lacy@icmpartners.com

PUBLICITY

Falco Ink.

Erica Abrams | EricaAbrams@FalcoInk.com

Allison Lambdin | AllisonLambdin@FalcoInk.com

212-445-7100

OFFICIAL TRAILER

 

OUR STORY

You must also study and learn the lessons of history because humanity has been involved in this soul-wrenching, existential struggle for a very long time. -  John Lewis


It's 1966 in Plaquemines Parish, a swampy strip of land south of New Orleans. A young Black fisherman, Gary Duncan, tries to break up a fight between white and Black teenagers outside a newly integrated school. He gently lays his hand on a white boy’s arm and the boy recoils like a snake. That night, police arrest 19-year-old Gary Duncan for assault on a minor.

After months of clashes, the public schools have been integrated by court order. But we are in the land of the white separatist despot, Leander Perez, who rules Plaquemines like his fiefdom, making sure that segregation sticks regardless of federal laws desegregating schools and mandating voting rights. Arresting men like Duncan keeps Black people in their place. With the help of a young attorney, Richard Sobol, Duncan bravely stands up to Perez. Systemic racism and pervasive anti-Semitism meet their match in decisive courtroom battles, including the U.S. Supreme Court; hate is vanquished by a powerful friendship that will last a lifetime. With the rise of white nationalism in the U.S. and abroad, there is no more important story to tell today. The roots and the mechanics of hate groups are in full display in this dramatic story of a crime on the bayou.

Our nation is beginning to confront our past in order to understand our present, engaging in the slow process of ‘tearing’ down historical commemorations of oppressors; our film is a part of the replacement, the more truthful re-telling of our past. In it we see monuments dismantled, from the “pretend laws” of Jim Crow to anthemic music symbolically transformed. We see children water hosed then voting for the first time. We see Gary Duncan getting justice in the U.S. Supreme Court.

But as we witness protests in today’s streets, we are reminded there is much that remains to be done, even if our story suggests there is hope in Gary’s story and in the allyship it represents. For every Gary Duncan there are thousands of Black men incarcerated for touching a white boy’s arm.

A Crime on the Bayou, inspired by Deep Delta Justice by Matthew Van Meter, is the third film in director Nancy Buirski's trilogy profiling brave individuals who fought for justice in and around the Civil Rights era, following The Loving Story and The Rape of Recy Taylor. Together this trilogy demonstrates that regular people standing up for their values are the root of progress. Mildred Loving, Recy Taylor and Gary Duncan did not set out to change history. But they remind us that anyone can. Important films have been made about racism – our film helps us to understand how the mechanics of white supremacy maintain racist institutions. We are inspired by those passionate individuals who work to defeat it and destroy the pervasive hate at its core.

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SELECT TEAM BIOGRAPHIES

NANCY BUIRSKI
Director/Producer/Writer

Buirski is Director/Producer/Writer of THE RAPE OF RECY TAYLOR (2017); World Premiere, Venice Film Festival; North American Premiere, New York Film Festival. Awarded the prestigious Human Rights Nights Special Prize for Human Rights at the 74° Venice Biennale. Nominated for the NAACP Image Award and Peabody Award. TV broadcast on STARZ/HULU.
Buirski is Director/Producer/Writer of BY SIDNEY LUMET (2015; American Masters); World Premiere at Cannes Film Festival. She is Director/Producer/Writer of AFTERNOON OF A FAUN (2013; American Masters); World Premiere, New York Film Festival, International Premiere, 64th Berlinale, record-breaking U.S Theatrical release with Kino Lorber. She is Director/Producer/Writer of the Oscar shortlisted, Peabody and Emmy Award-winning THE LOVING STORY (2011; HBO) and a Producer of LOVING by Jeff Nichols.
Buirski will direct TANNY, a narrative version of AFTERNOON OF A FAUN and ENDANGERED, an animated feature based on award-winning novel of the same name by Eliot Schrefer.
Buirski founded and ran the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival from 1997 to 2008. She is a member of the American Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. She is represented by ICM.


BRENDA ROBINSON

Executive Producer

Brenda Robinson is an entertainment attorney and partner in Gamechanger Films, an equity fund that finances feature films and television series by women and diverse storytellers. As a dedicated philanthropist in the arts and entertainment community, Brenda currently serves on the boards of Film Independent, The Representation Project, Chicken & Egg Pictures and the International Documentary Association (IDA). She is active in the Sundance Institute as a member of the Women at Sundance Leadership Council and serves as an advisor to The Redford Center. She is also a board member of Cinema/Chicago and the Chicago International Film Festival and currently serves as legal counsel to the festival. Brenda was most recently a financier on the Academy Award-winning documentary Icarus as well as Won’t You Be My Neighbor and Step. She is an executive producer on numerous projects including United Skates, alongside executive producer John Legend; The Great American Lie by director Jennifer Siebel Newsom; Jump Shot: The Kenny Sailors Story, alongside executive producer Steph Curry and Marian Anderson: The Whole World In Her Hands for PBS’ American Masters series.