Punishment Park by Peter Watkins
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Punishment Park by Peter Watkins

Spurring controversy from critics and audiences upon its release, Punishment Park remains a searingly relevant reflection on violence and authoritarian power in the United States. In a fabricated version of a dystopian 1971, a state of emergency is declared. Federal authorities implement the McCarran Act to punish opponents of the state deemed “a risk to national security.” With prisons at capacity, a European documentary team follows a group of activists hunted by the police and National Guard through a California desert. 1971, U.S., 35mm, English, 88 min.

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Peter Watkins is a British director known for filmmaking that blends documentary-style realism with narrative fiction, focusing on the intersections of art and media, social consciousness, and political themes. Following his studies at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, he began his career as an assistant producer of commercials. In the early 1960s, he was an assistant editor and director of documentaries at the BBC. Later a polemical and iconoclastic filmmaker who eschewed mainstream media and audiences, Watkins became unable to secure broad distribution and major broadcast support for his work. In 1965, the BBC withdrew its broadcast premiere of his film The War Game due to the graphic nature of the docudrama depicting the aftermath of a nuclear war in Britain. The film eventually went on to receive the 1966 Academy Award for Documentary Feature and was televised by the BBC in 1985 after a 20-year network ban.

Content Notes: Contains scenes of violence and police brutality.

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