More useful as a
historical artifact than as a proper cinematic experience, politically charged
documentary The Murder of Fred Hampton
is two movies awkwardly fused together. When production began, director Howard
Alk and his collaborators intended to make a piece about the Black Panther
Party, with a focus on Fred Hampton, the charismatic chairman of the party’s
Illinois chapter. Whether Alk’s team envisioned the final result as balanced
reportage or one-sided propaganda became irrelevant when, partway through
filming, Hampton was killed during a police raid. Adapting to changed
circumstances, the documentarians began compiling evidence and testimony
relating to Hampton’s death, eventually forming the opinion that Hampton was
assassinated by the Chicago Police Department. The final film begins with a
walk-through of the crime scene, then proceeds through nearly an hour of
footage from the first version of the production before shifting to an
investigation into Hampton’s death. To call this editing approach awkward
requires great understatement. One gets the sense that Alk either failed to
collect sufficient footage to make a legitimate film about Hampton’s death, or
that he simply lacked the will to reconfigure material he’d already filmed
and/or edited.
Whatever the case, The
Murder of Fred Hampton is not especially compelling or persuasive as an
activist expression, even though the simple facts of the case imply the Chicago
PD used excessive force. Where The Murder
of Fred Hampton has utility, however, is in documenting the anger and
purpose and vitality of the Panthers during their period of greatest political
currency. More specifically, the picture is a monument to Hampton’s efficacy as
a messenger, the very strength that, according to the filmmakers’ thesis, made
him a target for political opponents. Watching Hampton rap about education and
ideology reveals the complexity of his political thought, making it impossible
to dismiss him—and, by extension, the Panthers—as mere violent radicals. Like
so many counterculture groups that took root during the Vietnam era, the
Panthers asked important questions about American values in the age of the
military-industrial complex. Unlike other groups, they took the racial aspects
of such conversations seriously, arguing that toppling the white majority from
power was the only way to deliver equality for minorities. Seen in this light,
it’s easy for sympathetic viewers to accept this documentary’s underlying
premise, that Hampton was eliminated as part of a systematic effort to snuff a
revolutionary movement with the potential to change the structure of
American society.
The Murder of Fred Hampton: FUNKY
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