Film screening

"FREE MEN:" A film about Kenneth Reams

Date
Thu November 7th 2019, 7:00 - 9:15pm
Event Sponsor
Center for Human Rights & Int'l Justice, Center for Comparative Studies in Race and Ethnicity, Theater and Performance Studies, Haas Center for Public Service, Standford Arts Institute, Stanford Criminal Justice Center, and WhoDecides, Inc.
Location
Oshman Hall, McMurtry Building, 355 Roth Way, Stanford University
"FREE MEN:" A film about Kenneth Reams

PLEASE NOTE THE VENUE CHANGE: OSHMAN HALL.

Told through the charismatic voice of inmate Kenneth Reams, FREE MEN is a film about human resilience. In solitary confinement for the last 25 years, Kenneth has pushed back the walls of his cell to become a painter, a poet, the founder of a non-profit, and an art event organizer – while fighting at the same time for justice. At age 18, Kenneth Reams was convicted for capital murder without firing a bullet. He became the youngest inmate on Arkansas death row. Alongside art, the film shows how love can cross barbed wire and the length of an ocean in Kenneth’s love for Isabelle, a French artist who wants to become his wife. While Arkansas rushes to execute ten inmates in ten days – an absolute American record - the film captures Kenneth’s struggle, with unprecedented access to his daily battle, and raises universal questions:

How can we fight injustice? How can we continue to move forward and find a sense of purpose in life?  FREE MEN is a film for all those who have thought, one day, of giving up.

The film will be followed by a voice conversation with Kenneth Reams.

*Those with accessibility concerns should reach out directly to Anna Kimmel at ajkimmel [at] stanford.edu (ajkimmel[at]stanford[dot]edu).