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The Interrupters

  • 2011
  • Unrated
  • 2h 5m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
3.7K
YOUR RATING
The Interrupters (2011)
A year in the life of a Chicago non-profit whose mission is to work to resolve issues of conflict and violence.
Play trailer2:28
1 Video
7 Photos
CrimeDocumentary

A year in the life of a city grappling with urban violence.A year in the life of a city grappling with urban violence.A year in the life of a city grappling with urban violence.

  • Director
    • Steve James
  • Writer
    • Alex Kotlowitz
  • Stars
    • Tio Hardiman
    • Ameena Matthews
    • Toya Batey
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    3.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Steve James
    • Writer
      • Alex Kotlowitz
    • Stars
      • Tio Hardiman
      • Ameena Matthews
      • Toya Batey
    • 17User reviews
    • 72Critic reviews
    • 86Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 13 wins & 17 nominations total

    Videos1

    The Interrupters
    Trailer 2:28
    The Interrupters

    Photos6

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Tio Hardiman
    • Self
    Ameena Matthews
    • Self
    Toya Batey
    • Self
    Cobe Williams
    • Self
    Gary Slutkin
    • Self
    Earl Sawyer
    • Self
    Bud Oliver
    • Self
    Kenneth Oliver
    • Self
    Caprysha Anderson
    • Self
    Sheikh Rasheed
    • Self
    Alfreda Williams
    • Self
    Mildred Jones
    • Self
    Mildred Williams
    • Self
    Lillian 'Madea' Smith
    • Self
    Rashida
    • Self
    Malcolm Malik
    • Self
    Bob Jackson
    • Self
    Anjanette Albert
    • Self
    • Director
      • Steve James
    • Writer
      • Alex Kotlowitz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    7.53.6K
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    Featured reviews

    ersbel

    I came to see this movie to learn more about the method

    I came to see this movie to learn more about the method. Yet one hour in and it's still about the life in a Chicago suburb. Okay. Deceitful advertising. It is not about the method. It is about the neighborhood. I can take that. But beyond exploitation of the pain there is nothing. The only facts come from publicly available video clips. It's about poverty. The government is pouring billions into aid, yet the only ones getting well are the state employees. But the issue of poverty is only blurred in the background. At times the audience catches glimpses of religious leaders leeching on the pain and suffering to scam some more money. They talk the same talk that was heard for two hundred years and more in poor towns. And the violence does not seem to decrease. Yet, the producers don't want to touch that issue either.

    Somehow the audience is tricked into believing that the interrupters are picked from the community. But they are all community leaders. People with family and relationships. The upper middle class of the poor side of the city. So again, no help from the outside. Like the producers of this documentary, people come, see and go their own way. And the people stuck in there are left there to deal with the mess.

    Bottom line: an amateurish job with fuzzy goals and dubious scene selection.
    9JustCuriosity

    . The Inspiring Story of Chicagoans Fighting an Epidemic of Violence

    Steve James is a remarkable documentary filmmaker who has given us a series of amazing films starting with Hoop Dreams that explore some of the more difficult issues in our society including race, poverty, crime, and violence. His film on the Trial of Allen Iverson revealed the complex racial discourse at work beneath his hometown of Hampton, VA. His most recent film, The Interrupters, screened today at Austin's SXSW Film Festival. It is a powerful film that captures the plague of urban violence that plagues are cities – in this case Chicago – and goes beyond documenting to show a group of activists (many with troubled pasts) working for a group called Ceasefire.

    Ceasefire seeks to engage troubled young people and interrupt their dysfunctional behavior patterns of anger, crime, drug use, irresponsibility and violence. The Interrupters are acting heroically to try to save their imploding self-destructive communities. While the footage and the story are compelling, it could still use some editing since at over 2.5 hours it is a little too long. The length is understandable since James filmed over 300 hours, but it still needs to be paired down further to capture a manageable story.

    The other problem with the film is more complex. The Interrupters are fighting on the front lines in their efforts to save their communities. But the fight that they are engaged in is almost impossible, because their personal and human efforts to save individuals are divorced from a larger political reality. The film is a deeply personal and human, but it fails to address the deeper social problems in education, unemployment that have created the epidemic of violence. They are treating the symptoms of those who are already infected without searching out the causes of the disease.

    Sadly, the problems of the poor have disappeared from our political discourse since the collapse of the "War on Poverty." The current administration – led by our first urban President in decades - has failed to offer any sort of serious urban or anti-poverty agenda. Our political discourse focuses on the "middle class" and pretends as if poverty doesn't exist. Poverty has ceased to exist on American TV and in most of our news media coverage. Middle Class America has stopped seeing poverty which is quietly hidden away outside of our consciousness. The social contract that binds our society together is broken. We need far more films like the Interrupters to confront the American public with the realities of poverty and violence that are eating away at the soul of our society.

    Hopefully, many people will watch a film like The Interrupters and ask themselves two questions: What can I do as an individual to help groups like this make a difference in my community? What can I do as a citizen to get my government to act to make the structural changes that are needed to transform these communities?
    8view_and_review

    A Commitment to Ending Violence in Chicago

    "The Interrupters" is sad, upsetting, and hopeful. It's a year in Chicago with two different groups: CeaseFire Interrupters and Violence Interrupters. Both groups are dedicated to quelling, if not eliminating, the violence in the streets of Chicago. We were taken through Englewood, the "Ville," the "Gardens," and perhaps other neighborhoods in Chicago. The Interrupters were dedicated individuals from those streets who were committed to saving lives. They were once in the streets themselves, and who better to warn from the perils of street life than someone who survived it?

    $3.99 on YouTube, Google Play, and Apple TV.
    8jadepietro

    Meaner Streets

    This film is recommended.

    Flowers and candles, hand-printed messages written on notebook paper tacked to makeshift shrines, all decorated with photographs of young victims. This touching memorials litter the blood-spattered streets of Chicago and are the remains of the day in The Interrupters, a powerful and disturbing documentary by the talented Steve James ( Hoop Dreams ).

    His film takes the moviegoer directly into the crime-ridden neighborhoods as we meet a group of peacemakers trying to restore sanity and preaching their anti-violence message to the choir. The group is called CeaseFire and it is made up of ex-gang leaders and former convicts whose motto is Stop the Violence - Save a Life.

    James directed and photographed his documentary and focuses on three interrupter and their "scared straight" strategies of tough love and reality checks. We met Cobe Williams, a former gang member and family man now whose father was killed during a street fight, Eddie Bocanegra, a young man easily impressed by the gang's image of fast cars, money, and girls who served 14 years for murder and now uses art as a method of expression and conflict mediation, and the primary spokesperson, Ameena Matthews, the daughter of a gang leader who was physically, emotionally, and sexually abused at an early age and has since let faith and family lead her away from that life-style and keep her grounded.

    We also met some of those troubled teens: Caprysha, a defeated Precious type, living in a halfway house, dreaming of a better life while constantly lying and breaking her parole; Lil Mikey, released from prison and wanting to be a better role model for his siblings; and Flamo, a young man enraged with his mother and brother's arrest and wanting his own form of justice. It is impossible not to care about their people and their lives.

    The film consists of interviews with gang members, families of their victims, and scenes of escalating violence. At times, The Interrupters becomes slightly repetitive in its interventions and lock-step mindset of anger and frustration. More judicious editing could have made the film even more forceful. But the passion for its compelling subject and James' craft as a filmmaker make up for those minor complaints.

    The documentary gives us no easy answers as drugs, unemployment, alcohol, poverty,and guns still are a major reason for the neighborhood's ills. Politicians come and go with each election, giving lip service and promises. Yet these people and their difficult lives become the on-going problem in search of a solution, and groups like CeaseFire seem to be their only course of positive action. The Interrupters allows us to see a world that we can never fathom and acknowledge the spirit of a group of strong-willed survivors, trying to make a difference and save a life or two throughout a normal day. GRADE: B

    NOTE: Visit my movie blog for more reviews: www.dearmoviegoer.com
    10evanston_dad

    Chicago at War

    Only 9 reviews?!! This movie needs to be seen!

    I live in Chicago, and every morning the Chicago Tribune has a headline tallying the overnight wounded and dead. It's not at all unlike the beginning days of the Gulf War, where every news hour would begin with the number of soldiers killed that day. The difference being that those stories gradually subsided as the numbers dwindled, and they were based on deaths in an actual military conflict. There are neighborhoods in Chicago that are as much like war zones as any area of Afghanistan, but no one is paying attention.

    "The Interrupters" doesn't really try to address why no one is paying attention. It doesn't need to, because everyone pretty much knows the answer even if they're not willing to admit it to themselves. These aren't rural white kids getting killed for their country; these are poor, disenfranchised black kids who most people don't care about. Instead, this documentary follows a few members of CeaseFire, a nonprofit group comprised of past gang members, street criminals, etc. who are now using a tactic of intervention to stop chains of violence before they spiral out of control. These people are deeply admirable. They're not trying to break up gangs, they're not police informers. They're simply trying to make one person understand how pointless it is to shoot another person, no matter what grievances are at play.

    This film is by Steve James, the same director who did the tremendous "Hoop Dreams," and if it doesn't have that film's epic scope, it has a more immediate sense of urgency.

    After watching "The Interrupters" my wife and I were instantly online looking into ways to support CeaseFire. I hope others do the same.

    Grade: A+

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film is Steve James' sixth feature length collaboration with his long-time filmmaking home, the non-profit Chicago production studio Kartemquin Films, and is also his fifth feature to screen at the Sundance Film Festival.
    • Connections
      Featured in Ebert Presents: At the Movies: Episode #2.12 (2011)
    • Soundtracks
      We Came To Party
      Written by Brendon Dallas a.k.a. Money Flip

      Performed by Money Flip featuring Punch G and Ace Da God

      Courtesy of HollaScreem Records

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 12, 2011 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Untitled Steve James Project
    • Filming locations
      • Illinois, USA
    • Production companies
      • Kartemquin Films
      • Rise Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $282,448
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $7,920
      • Jul 31, 2011
    • Gross worldwide
      • $286,457
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 5m(125 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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