This year’s iteration primarily features films written, directed and produced by Kansas Citians. It has showcased three feature films including “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” which opened the festival, four documentaries and one short film.
A highlight from this year’s programming is the documentary “The Heroic True-Life Adventures of Alvin Brooks” directed by Kevin Willmott, who won an Academy Award for co-writing “BlacKKKlansman” and is a native of Kansas. About Kansas City, Missouri civil rights icon Alvin Brooks, the documentary is based off of his 2001 memoir Binding Us Together: A Civil Rights Activist Reflects on a Lifetime of Community and Public Service. The film is a heartfelt, inspiring narrative that is inextricably linked to the nation’s past and present. The 92-year old Brooks shares engaging, funny, and tragic stories about his life and career of advocacy in Kansas City.
Brooks has tirelessly served the city’s community for decades — as one of its first Black police officers, and was appointed the City’s first Black department head and established the first human relations department shortly after the 1968 riots. He was also an educator, a city councilman, Mayor Pro-Tem of Kansas City, Missouri and founder of Ad Hoc Group Against Crime in 1977.
Kevin Willmott is arguably among the most significant filmmakers working today. He has uniquely and unwaveringly captured the Black experience through cinema. From his masterful satire “C.S.A. Confederate States of America,” to the quietly powerful “Jayhawker” to the moving and insightful “The 24th,” Willmott has delivered keen, meaningful observations on race, politics, and culture with all of his films.
Other stellar documentaries include “Kansas City Dreamin’,’’ a film that chronicles the history of Black music in Kansas City. It features interviews with Melissa Etheridge, Tech N9ne, Bobby Watson, Oleta Adams, Lonnie McFadden, Oscar-winner Kevin Willmont, and more. With segments on Charlie Parker, Count Basie, Janelle Monae, Big Joe Turner, and other Kansas City natives the film celebrates Kansas City’s contribution to American music.
“The Pistol” is also a gripping documentary that delves into the real-life accounts of notorious local gangster Kenneth Rayford. Directed by Paul Rayford, the film details the exploits of Rayford from his time as a youth growing up on the mean streets of Kansas City, Missouri up to adulthood when he ran the streets of Kansas City and robbed banks. Through interviews with Kenneth and his accomplices, combined with actual news footage, the documentary reveals the life of a real-underworld crime figure. The film paints a compelling portrait of a man who literally dedicated his entire life to the criminal underworld, maintained a solid reputation and actually lived to talk about it.