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路易斯安那州Cajun小鎮年度黑人多數公立高中和白人多數私立高中美式足球比賽探討種族主義和種族隔離歷史2020 New Orleans Film Festival 入選片

英文發音.英文字幕.2020.30分鐘.1片DVD

SKU: N01-22-016 Categories: , , ,
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Description

A small Cajun town in rural Louisiana holds an annual exhibition football game between the majority Black public school and majority White private school, called the Tee Cotton Bowl. This meditative small town portrait examines segregation and a range of perspectives on the game and whether it should continue to be celebrated as it is.

Ville Platte, Louisiana is a dying town that is one of the poorest in the state. Despite this, a steady thread of optimistic survival persists and ramps up around the yearly Tee Cottown Bowl game between the town’s two schools. The one-week event that culminates in a friendly high school football game is regarded as a precious tradition to the older residents particularly when held up to Ville Platte’s past of racial segregation.

Jennifer Vidrine, both the first female and first Black mayor of the town, Tim Fontenot, the white founder of the Tee Cotton Bowl, Grace Vidrine Sibley, the first desegregant of Ville Platte high school in 1965, and others all weigh in with their respective insights on the town’s past in relation to the Tee Cotton Bowl. Within living memory lurks ugly memories, but the game is seen as a hopeful beginning of sorts.