Academy Award-winning director Roger Ross Williams and CNN Films have announced their collaboration on a new documentary feature, ‘American Jail’.
The provocative, often deeply personal film explores what fuels America’s prison system. Williams’ investigation presents a range of stakeholder positions, and offers working examples of potential solutions, even travelling to the Netherlands for cases of success, to address the ‘prison pipeline’ that criminalises the mistakes of the poor and the vulnerable.
CNN Films holds exclusive North American broadcast rights to the film. ‘American Jail’ will premiere on Sunday, July 1st at 9:00pm Eastern and Pacific on CNN.
“I’m very excited to bring this film to CNN Films’ audiences. Our criminal justice system is broken on many levels, and I believe that it is essential for every American to understand what is at stake: tax payers’ dollars, the economy, human potential, and human lives,” said Williams.
Williams launches ‘American Jail’ with a quest for understanding the factors that led a childhood friend to commit suicide at the age of 52. Thomas Alvin made relatively common mistakes in his young life: challenging authority and excessively drinking. “He was the last person I would have expected to end his life,” Williams narrates in the film, recalling a sweet-natured friend and family man, who rose early to make meals for his now devastated daughter. As Williams researches what factors yielded very different outcomes for his own life from that of his friend, he also learns that “Tommy’s story” is far from unique.
“Roger’s perceptive voice has always added singular cinematic insight to understanding how, despite our outward differences, people around the world have the same desires: the hope to be understood, and the desires to love and be loved. With ‘American Jail’, Roger seeks to expand our compassion for people caught in a cycle of incarceration, to inform our comprehension, and to ask whether ultimately, our policies service society,” said Amy Entelis, executive vice president of talent and content development for CNN Worldwide.
Cleverly employing animation and expert commentary to illustrate the complexities of the challenge, Williams examines the history of incarceration in America and its origins in the practice of indentured servitude, and even slavery, as well as the need for labor to maintain and fuel the prison industry. He contends that poor people and minorities are more likely to receive the harshest penalties for nonviolent infractions, and can sometimes pay a lifetime of punishment for what more advantaged people may describe as ‘mistakes.’
Williams’ quest also turns inward. “The irony is [that] homosexuality may have saved my life,” Williams narrates in the film. Although closeted from even his closest childhood friends, Williams says his self-awareness motivated him to leave Easton, PA, for an education and to engage in work that would help him find others who would better understand him. Eventually, Williams became a journalist and independent filmmaker. Williams says that his personal safety, and even survival, depended upon that mission. “[Tommy’s story] would have been my story, if I hadn’t gotten out of Easton,” Williams says in ‘American Jail’.
‘American Jail’ is written, directed, and produced by Roger Ross Williams is produced by Femke Wolting and Bruno Felix. ‘American Jail’ is executive produced by Amy Entelis and Courtney Sexton of CNN Films, and Mette Hoffman Meyer and Nick Fraser. David Teague and Mike Peterson are the editors and Hans Bouma and RaMell Ross are cinematographers for ‘American Jail’.