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1997
102 minutes
Documentary
English
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On September 15, 1963, in Birmingham, Alabama, a bomb exploded inside a church that had an all-black congregation. Four girls were killed. This outstanding documentary - made 34 years after the attack by director Spike Lee - lets the families of the girls talk about the pain that they are still suffering, and investigates the shocking racial politics of the time, when African-Americans in the Southern states couldn't use the same restaurants or even drinking fountains as whites.
Powerful epic from famed director Spike Lee about the life of late African-American Civil Rights leader Malcolm X.
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Read MoreIn the US south in the 60s, just after the passing of the Civil Rights Act, a black police officer is arrested for a prominent white citizen's murder.
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Powerful drama focusing on Martin Luther King’s campaign to secure voting rights for black Americans.
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