Life Inside Out

200555 minFilm: Documentaire

Réalisation: Sarah Zammit

Production: Peter StarrSilva Basmajian

Scénarisation: Sarah Zammit

Life Inside Out is a vérité-style documentary that takes us inside the walls of Grand Valley Institution — one of five federal prisons for women in Canada. Here, most residents live in small houses they share with ten or more roommates, in an environment that is supposed to be more female-friendly than the notorious Kingston Prison for Women, now shuttered.

The first documentary to go behind the walls of this new breed of prison, Life Inside Out features three unforgettable women over age 50, doing time in a system that can seem designed to frustrate and baffle. It's a world where arbitrary decisions, bureaucratic ineptitude and a Kafkaesque parallel justice system control every last detail of inmates' lives.

When we meet Kim, a quiet immigrant from Vietnam, she waits with increasing desperation for a parole board hearing put off so often she begins to doubt it will happen. Without proper access to a translator, she is left to fend for herself, with the help of her well-meaning but cynical lawyer.

Pearl, who describes her philosophy as “Live for today, why worry about tomorrow?” relies on her faith in God to stay positive through prison absurdities — like educational programs of dubious value and being charged with planning to try to escape. “It doesn't sound right,” she says. “They should let me try to escape first, then charge me.”

And then there's TA — brash, outspoken and alternately crude and tender. She's serving a 20-year sentence, bucking and challenging the system every step of the way. Whether singing a country music weeper of her own composition, agitating for a smoke-free house, or fighting for programs for abused women, TA comes across as larger than life.

With remarkable access to these women and their daily lives, filmmaker Sarah Zammit delivers a film that doesn't idealize the women. At the same time, it refuses to accept the false logic that people who have committed crimes are not worthy of basic human dignity.

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Catégories de sujets


  • Femmes > Femmes âgéesConditions sociales
  • Droit et Criminalité > Prisons et PrisonniersAînésFemmes et Système judiciaire

Générique


écriture
Sarah Zammit
réalisateur
Sarah Zammit
producteur
Peter Starr
directeur de la photographie
Joan Hutton
monteur
Lawrence Jackman
prise de son
Steve McNamee
montage son
Barry Gilmore
Kathy Choi
assistant monteur sonore
Jean Bot
caméra additionnelle
Stanislaw Barua
Sarah Zammit
prise de son additionnelle
Jason Milligan
Ao Loo
Tom Bilenkey
Eric Fitz
interprète
An Do
Quyn Dang
en-ligne
Sylvain Desbiens
correction des couleurs
Sylvain Desbiens
ré-enregistrement
Luc Léger
agent de budget
Ida Di Fruscia
coordonnateur technique
Mark Wilson
Branden Bratuhin
agent, marketing
Sue Mander
coordonnateur de production
Anousheh Showleh
Lisa Broadfoot
superviseur de production
Kemp Archibald
production déléguée
Douglas MacFarlane
producteur exécutif
Silva Basmajian
participant
Corinna McMaster
Clover Woolcock
Tamara Becker
Meachel Chad
Hal Matson
Joey
Doreen
Terry Shelswell
Bobby Bala
Nicki Smith
Charlene
Charlene Campbell
Amy Bowden
An Bui
Carole Clapperton
Christie Jefferson
Sandra
Mitch