I found this a very well-researched and well-constructed documentary. It lets the facts speak for themselves - and of course they have a devastating story to tell.
Having seen the movie *Green Book*, I knew a little about the problems Blacks faced when they drove around the U. S. in the first decades after World War II. I had never thought about how the interstate highway system lessened some of those- Blacks didn't have to stop in small towns to get from one place to another. I knew that the construction of the interstate through cities often led to the destruction of Black neighborhoods. I saw that happen in Milwaukee in the 1960s. But it was not just Black neighborhoods. It was any neighborhood too poor to defend itself, too underrepresented in Congress and state legislatures.
A previous reviewed found the last 15 minutes of this documentary less objective and more slanted. I disagree. It is the section that shows one example after the next of police stopping a car with a Black driver, and then either yanking him out and beating him or shooting him while he is still behind the wheel. That's not easy to watch. But even so, I wish they had provided information in each instance of where it took place and what happened to the driver.
The scene where the Black father, perhaps in his 40s, asks whites to look him in the eye and imagine what it is like to think that such things might happen to their sons, as he fears it might happen to his, is devastating and hard to watch without crying. But I know that is what my Black friends who are parents worry about.
I strongly recommend this documentary. I have lived through most of the era that it covered, yet I still learned a lot.