Selection of Short Films from the Pittsburgh Police
Screening on Film
From 1969-1970, working in association with the Lemburg Center for Violence Studies at Brandeis University, Marshall directed and shot a series of short films following the day-to-day events of a police squad in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Filmed during the racial tensions and civil disorder that gripped the city in response to Martin Luther King’s assassination – a period that witnessed the arrest of two thousand citizens – Marshall gained incredible access to the inner workings of the urban police force. Designed for use in law schools, community relations projects, sociology and urban studies programs and for use by the police themselves, the films cut to the bone of such issues as privacy and civil liberties versus police intervention while providing a fascinating perspective on one of the most turbulent periods in recent American history.
PROGRAM
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Nothing Hurt But My Pride
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 15 min.
Print source: HFA -
Vagrant Woman
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 8 min.
Print source: HFA -
Wrong Kid
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 8 min.
Print source: HFA -
After the Game
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 9 min.
Print source: HFA -
Youth and the Man of Property
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 7 min.
Print source: HFA -
A $40 Misunderstanding
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 8 min.
Print source: HFA -
You Wasn't Loitering
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 6 min.
Print source: HFA -
Henry is Drunk
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 7 min.
Print source: HFA -
Manifold Controversy
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 3 min.
Print source: HFA -
$21 or 21 Days
Directed by John Marshall.
US, 1973, 16mm, black & white, 8 min.
Print source: HFA