BDC Member Films Streaming Free
@PBS Video All Month!
Daisy Bates: First Lady of Little Rock, Hip-Hop: Beyond Beats and Rhymes,
More Than a Month, and Soul Food Junkies
click PBS logo to watch films
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William Hooker
and
Body and Soul, by Oscar Micheaux
Free Screening
Target Free Thursdays
Thurs, February 20, 7:30p
Target Free Thursdays
David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center
Frieda and Roy Furman Stage
The kinetically charged, free-time percussionist William Hooker leads his ensemble in an original score accompanying a screening of Oscar Micheaux's controversial 1925 film, Body and Soul. Featuring Paul Robeson in his screen debut, the iconic film addresses issues of race, crime, and sexuality.
Followed by Q&A with William Hooker and film enthusiast, Chris Sampson
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Baadasssss!
by Mario Van Peebles
Free Screening & Performance
Tuesday, February 25th
David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center
Presented by Just Films at AtriumFlix
JustFilms at AtriumFlix kicks off its 2014 season with a special screening of Baadassss!-- a revealing documentary about the making of his father's groundbreaking 1971 independent film, Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song.
Before the screening, Melvin Van Peebles wid Laxative band will perform!
Conversation with Mario and Melvin Van Peebles to follow,
moderated by Greg Tate
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Slavery By Another Name
by Sam Pollard
**DATE CORRECTION**
Wednesday, February 26th
6:30pm
City College of NY, Shepard Hall Room 291
259 Convent Avenue at 140th Street
Followed by Q&A with Sam Pollard
Presented by the Documentary Forum@CCNY, the MCA Department, the Black Studies Program, the Colin Powell School for Civic and Global Leadership and Third World Newsreel and the Black Documentary Collective
Free, limited seating, RSVP required

This fascinating 90 minute documentary challenges one of America's most cherished assumptions: the belief that slavery ended with Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation of 1863. The documentary recounts how in the years following the Civil War, insidious new forms of forced labor emerged in the American South, keeping hundreds of thousands of African Americans in bondage, trapping them in a brutal system that would persist until the onset of World War II.
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BDC and Frame:Runner Partnership!
Frame:Runner is a High Definition post-production facility specializing in color correction and finishing for broadcast television, festivals and theatrical distribution They have worked on countless award-winning projects for BDC members, including Stanley Nelson's Freedom Summer and Thomas Allen Harris' Through A Lens Darkly, both premiering at this year's Sundance Film Festival!
Frame:Runner is offering a special discount to BDC Members on all professional services, from color correction and finishing in Avid, Final Cut Pro, DaVinci Resolve, and Premiere Pro, file and tape conversions, duplication and sound mixing.
This is an INCREDIBLE benefit to our members!
Thank you, Frame:Runner!
Frame:Runner
555 West 57th Street, NYC
212-246-4224
Keith Shapiro, General Manager/Partner
keith@framerunner.com
* * * BDC and Women Make Movies
BDC Members are eligible for the partner discount for Women Make Movies workshops
Membership status subject to verification for all benefits.
Invalid membership status may result in additional charges from participating vendors.
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BDC Catalog & Directory is accepting submissions!
The BDC Catalog & Directory is a searchable database of BDC members' work and contact information available to production companies,
networks, press, distributors, educators and others interested in
purchasing, screening, distributing member films and hiring our members.
This BDC-exclusive resource is an invaluable opportunity to
reach audiences, increase visibility, promotional opportunities,
as well as get work and generate revenue.
We have already received requests from CBS, The Documentary Channel, ASPiRE, Magic Johnson's new cable network, to name a few.
But they can't reach you and we can't refer you if you're not in it,
so please submit your information now!
Please send an email for further instructions to:
You MUST be a current BDC Member to be included.
Click below to join the BDC or renew your membership.
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The Black Documentary Collective (BDC) was founded in 2000 by the late great documentarian St. Clair Bourne, as the singular networking organization for documentary film, video, and media professionals of African descent. The BDC supports its members through hosting screenings, access to professional development workshops, discounted professional services, educational programs, and networking events. The BDC is also dedicated to making a difference in the ever-increasing communities that are interested in, and influenced by the work of its talented members, through community partnerships,
outreach and engagement.
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