Prison-set ‘Sing Sing’ makes powerful argument for humanity – Paradise Post

Prison-set ‘Sing Sing’ makes powerful argument for humanity – Paradise Post

Katie Walsh | Tribune News Service (TNS)

A film like “Sing Sing” is a rare, precious thing. An artifact crafted with the utmost care, this is a cinematic work of unique empathy, a slice of hand-turned humanity, hewn from the heart, with rigorous attention paid to the process itself.

How this quietly captivating film was made is almost the more important story, but it is part and parcel with the text on screen. “Sing Sing” is the result of years of research and volunteer work on behalf of writer/director Greg Kwedar and his co-writer Clint Bentley with Rehabilitation Through the Arts, a theater program for incarcerated men at Sing Sing Correctional Facility. Kwedar and Bentley tried to mount a narrative film project about RTA, but never managed to capture the magic they experienced in the room itself. So they decided to bring the room itself to the screen, casting a group of RTA alumni alongside stars Colman Domingo and Paul Raci.

In “Sing Sing,” the supporting cast are all playing themselves (or something like themselves), and giving damn good performances too. Domingo steps into the role of John “Divine G” Whitfield, a man incarcerated at Sing Sing who has become a playwright and actor through RTA. Raci plays RTA director Brent Buell with his signature irascible warmth, while one of Domingo’s longtime collaborators Sean San Jose gives a terrific performance as Mike Mike, Divine G’s close friend. However, the true star-is-born moment in “Sing Sing” belongs to Clarence “Divine Eye” Maclin, playing himself, a man hardened by his past, and his present, who finds grace and tenderness in the theater.

The plot follows the production of RTA’s first original play, a sprawling time-travel comedy that moves from ancient Egypt to gladiator arenas to the Old West, with a visit from Freddy Krueger too (it’s based on the real Buell’s play “Breakin’ the Mummy’s Code,” detailed in a 2005 Esquire article by John H. Richardson). But the film is about so much more than just these men putting on a show. It’s about the hope and heartbreak within these walls; the personal growth and triumph that these men experience together onstage. It’s a stark reminder that life in prison is still life, in prison.

Kwedar demonstrates a remarkable patience with his filmmaking, in both form and storytelling. Cinematographer Pat Scola shoots on 16 mm, celluloid requiring the kind of care and thoughtfulness that this story also requires. The film stock is rich and saturated in a warm palette of earthy golds and greens that reflects both the natural and institutional environment.

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