American Revolution 2 (1969) dir. Howard Alk , Mike Gray

Considering the seismic activity that shook America throughout the 1960s brought on by popular political, social, and cultural malcontent—of which the 1968 Democratic Convention could be considered an apogee—the general assumption that a second revolution was on the horizon was not far-flung. For filmmakers Howard Alk and Mike Gray, this societal shake-up became entirely palpable when documenting the formation of the unlikely alliance between the Illinois Black Panthers—helmed by Bobby Lee—and the Young Patriots, a poor Appalachian community living in Chicago’s uptown neighborhood, in their film American Revolution 2. Alk and Gray were both part of a loose collective of Chicago-based filmmakers known as The Film Group. Their cinema was direct and sought out veracity to combat the omnipresent confusion of the 1960s. This yearning to understand how everyday citizens persisted or, in other cases, challenged government offenses dictates American Revolution 2’s form. The film gradually transitions from frenetic protest footage to more deliberate recordings, detailing civil debates between distinct political groups. “The two [Black Panthers and Young Patriots] met, and the film, American Revolution 2 became the story of the Rainbow Coalition in Chicago, which was Appalachian whites, Puerto Ricans and Blacks. The Coalition frightened official Chicago enormously.” HOWARD ALK According to Alk, “American Revolution 2 did very well critically, but very badly theatrically.” (This was partly due to Mayor Daley strong-arming the Screen Projectors Union into not showing the film, but more on this later.) Yet, its impact was not small. The film was one of the first to receive a four-star review from a young Roger Ebert working at the Chicago Sun-Times; was lugged and shown around Europe by Jean-Luc Godard; prompted a response film from the police titled What Trees Do They Plant?; and premiered at the Playboy Theater in April, 1969, after Hugh Hefner heard of Mayor Daley’s action to suppress it. Alk and Gray’s account of the Rainbow Coalition’s genesis combines the fuel and the fire of a burgeoning revolution, marked by cogent political arguments and honest depictions of daily struggle.
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