Ava Duvernay Trains Her Gaze On The Central Park Five
Time|June 3 - 10, 2019

NEARLY AN HOUR INTO AVA DUVERNAY’S NETFLIX MINISERIES When They See Us, four of the boys known as the Central Park Five are left alone together in a holding cell.

Judy Berman
Ava Duvernay Trains Her Gaze On The Central Park Five

(The fifth, Korey Wise, is locked in with adults because he’s 16.) They’ve just spent hours being interrogated—and intimidated—by police trying to prove they gang-raped a woman in the park and left her for dead. In fact, most of the boys don’t even know one another. There’s a long silence before they start talking. The camera alternates between closeups of these scared, exhausted, beaten-up kids’ faces. They see each other. Hopefully, we see them too.

As the title suggests, the idea of seeing is crucial to this elegant, wrenching interpretation of the Central Park Five story. DuVernay, who wrote, directed and helped produce the miniseries, has a gift for framing a familiar historical moment so that you can really see it for the first time. In this case, the Selma director’s simplest but most profound decision is to portray five black and Latino boys, ages 14 to 16, as the scared children they are, rather than as the gangsters or delinquents they were made out to be.

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