Post by TheWallsScreamedPoetry on Jan 1, 2005 12:59:13 GMT
John and his wife Leslie Neale are involved in several film projects details of which can be found at these sites.
Juvies
LESLIE NEALE
Director’s Statement
"When I started volunteer teaching at Juvenile Hall in Los Angeles, I was naïve to juvenile justice, thinking children were handled fairly and with care, not only for their safety, but also for the safety of the public at large. What I found is that scores of children are getting thrown away in adult prisons instead of staying in the rehabilitative environment of the juvenile system, a structure originally designed to protect them from ending up in the adult system. The making of “Juvies” has made my life make an irrevocable turn towards correcting the juvenile justice system, making it one that is run with intelligence, responsibility and mercy."
Four years ago, high school student Duc was arrested for driving a car from which a gun was shot. Although no one was injured, Duc was not a member of a gang, had no priors and was 16 years old, he received a sentence of 35 years to life.
Fourteen-year-old Anait, an Armenian immigrant, had been given a car by her parents. She drove two boys to a high school and dropped them off. The boys got into a fight with another boy and subsequently killed a third boy who attempted to break up the fight. Because she was the driver of the “getaway” car, Anait was charged as an accessory to first-degree murder. Originally facing 200 years, she has since accepted a deal for 7 years.
Being tough on crime is one thing. But trying children as adults, and dispensing brutal sentences that are shockingly out of proportion to the offense, is quite another. Most Americans would say this can’t happen here, yet for thousands of young people, this is the reality of the present day juvenile justice system, which has turned its back on its initial mission to protect young people and now sends over 200,000 kids through the adult system each year.
From award-winning documentary filmmaker Leslie Neale (Road to Return) comes this riveting look at a world most of us will never see: the world of juvenile offenders who are serving incredible prison sentences for crimes they either did not commit or were only marginally involved in. For two years, Neale taught a video production class at Los Angeles Central Juvenile Hall to 12 juveniles who were all being tried as adults. Juvies is the product of that class, which was a learning experience for both students and teacher—and becomes a learning experience for all of us, as we witness the heartbreaking stories of children abandoned by families and a system that has disintegrated into a kind of vending machine justice.
Narrated by actor Mark Wahlberg, himself a former juvenile offender, Juvies follows the lives of a group of young people who will serve most, if not all, of their lives behind bars. The kids talk about the mistakes they made and what they would do if they had the chance to do things differently. They exhibit courage in the midst of the most despairing conditions. And they force us to ask, “Why is this happening? Why have we allowed it to happen? And what can we do now to change laws that are nothing less than draconian, that we as a citizenry have allowed to be enacted?”<br>
Interspersed with the kids’ stories are interviews with experts in juvenile justice and gangs, and with well-known faces, like former Los Angeles District Attorney Gil Garcetti, who, in an incredible scene, admits that sentences like the one Michael Duc Ta received—during Garcetti’s own tenure as D.A—are unfair and should never have happened.
What has gone wrong with our juvenile justice system? And can it be changed before more young lives are destroyed forever? Juvies offers no easy answers, but it will make you think long and hard about what democracy and justice really mean.
www.juvies.net/index.html
Road To Return
"My husband, John Densmore, was in Washington, D.C. at the first national multi-cultural men's gathering in 1992," recalls Neale. "There were about 50 African-Americans and 50 white men--very kinetic, lots of rage, anger and incredible love. At one point this guy stood up and said he worked in prisons and had permission to give drums to the inmates, but they had no money with which to buy them. John felt that this was the perfect opportunity for him to give something back to society because drums have given him everything. So he had 30 hand drums made and sent to Dixon Correctional Institute in Baton Rouge, Louisiana."
"John got the idea to stop into Dixon and see how the drumming was going. I was eight months pregnant at the time and there was no way I wanted to go for a little vacation to a maximum security men's prison," Neale laughs at the recollection. "But I didn't want to be stuck in an 8-Days Inn by myself either. So I went with John, and we found ourselves in this room where Bob Roberts (head of the Project Return program) was leading a community building workshop, with 50 men and no guards. At first I was scared; I'll admit it. But I ended up being blown away by the whole experience. There was drumming and dancing, and what emerged was a level of honesty that I had never before in my life witnessed. Men were baring their souls, sharing stories of pain and abuse. Almost immediately I saw that something was happening in this room that people all across the U.S. had to know about."
"I got hold of Sister Helen's book," recalls Neale. "I didn't know Tim (Robbins) was doing the movie. But after reading it I knew I had to get to her because she could articulate the obstacle of fear that we in society feel toward the criminal. And until we get over that fear we can't change anything. As an individual, I knew I had to get past that fear myself in ordr to walk in this world. And Sister Helen's book gave me the courage to do this."
Producer/Director/Writer/Filmmaker Leslie Neale is a veteran of the film business with 15 years experience both behind the camera as a production manager and assistant, and in front of the camera as an actress with roles in Clean & Sober, Gremlins II and Honey, I Blew Up The Kids, among other well known movies. Neale graduated from the University of Texas in Austin with a Bachelor of Science in Radio, TV and Film. Road to Return marks her debut as a documentary film director and producer.
www.reentrymediaoutreach.org/rr.htm
www.thedoors.com/band/john/?fa=road
Juvies
LESLIE NEALE
Director’s Statement
"When I started volunteer teaching at Juvenile Hall in Los Angeles, I was naïve to juvenile justice, thinking children were handled fairly and with care, not only for their safety, but also for the safety of the public at large. What I found is that scores of children are getting thrown away in adult prisons instead of staying in the rehabilitative environment of the juvenile system, a structure originally designed to protect them from ending up in the adult system. The making of “Juvies” has made my life make an irrevocable turn towards correcting the juvenile justice system, making it one that is run with intelligence, responsibility and mercy."
Four years ago, high school student Duc was arrested for driving a car from which a gun was shot. Although no one was injured, Duc was not a member of a gang, had no priors and was 16 years old, he received a sentence of 35 years to life.
Fourteen-year-old Anait, an Armenian immigrant, had been given a car by her parents. She drove two boys to a high school and dropped them off. The boys got into a fight with another boy and subsequently killed a third boy who attempted to break up the fight. Because she was the driver of the “getaway” car, Anait was charged as an accessory to first-degree murder. Originally facing 200 years, she has since accepted a deal for 7 years.
Being tough on crime is one thing. But trying children as adults, and dispensing brutal sentences that are shockingly out of proportion to the offense, is quite another. Most Americans would say this can’t happen here, yet for thousands of young people, this is the reality of the present day juvenile justice system, which has turned its back on its initial mission to protect young people and now sends over 200,000 kids through the adult system each year.
From award-winning documentary filmmaker Leslie Neale (Road to Return) comes this riveting look at a world most of us will never see: the world of juvenile offenders who are serving incredible prison sentences for crimes they either did not commit or were only marginally involved in. For two years, Neale taught a video production class at Los Angeles Central Juvenile Hall to 12 juveniles who were all being tried as adults. Juvies is the product of that class, which was a learning experience for both students and teacher—and becomes a learning experience for all of us, as we witness the heartbreaking stories of children abandoned by families and a system that has disintegrated into a kind of vending machine justice.
Narrated by actor Mark Wahlberg, himself a former juvenile offender, Juvies follows the lives of a group of young people who will serve most, if not all, of their lives behind bars. The kids talk about the mistakes they made and what they would do if they had the chance to do things differently. They exhibit courage in the midst of the most despairing conditions. And they force us to ask, “Why is this happening? Why have we allowed it to happen? And what can we do now to change laws that are nothing less than draconian, that we as a citizenry have allowed to be enacted?”<br>
Interspersed with the kids’ stories are interviews with experts in juvenile justice and gangs, and with well-known faces, like former Los Angeles District Attorney Gil Garcetti, who, in an incredible scene, admits that sentences like the one Michael Duc Ta received—during Garcetti’s own tenure as D.A—are unfair and should never have happened.
What has gone wrong with our juvenile justice system? And can it be changed before more young lives are destroyed forever? Juvies offers no easy answers, but it will make you think long and hard about what democracy and justice really mean.
www.juvies.net/index.html
Road To Return
"My husband, John Densmore, was in Washington, D.C. at the first national multi-cultural men's gathering in 1992," recalls Neale. "There were about 50 African-Americans and 50 white men--very kinetic, lots of rage, anger and incredible love. At one point this guy stood up and said he worked in prisons and had permission to give drums to the inmates, but they had no money with which to buy them. John felt that this was the perfect opportunity for him to give something back to society because drums have given him everything. So he had 30 hand drums made and sent to Dixon Correctional Institute in Baton Rouge, Louisiana."
"John got the idea to stop into Dixon and see how the drumming was going. I was eight months pregnant at the time and there was no way I wanted to go for a little vacation to a maximum security men's prison," Neale laughs at the recollection. "But I didn't want to be stuck in an 8-Days Inn by myself either. So I went with John, and we found ourselves in this room where Bob Roberts (head of the Project Return program) was leading a community building workshop, with 50 men and no guards. At first I was scared; I'll admit it. But I ended up being blown away by the whole experience. There was drumming and dancing, and what emerged was a level of honesty that I had never before in my life witnessed. Men were baring their souls, sharing stories of pain and abuse. Almost immediately I saw that something was happening in this room that people all across the U.S. had to know about."
"I got hold of Sister Helen's book," recalls Neale. "I didn't know Tim (Robbins) was doing the movie. But after reading it I knew I had to get to her because she could articulate the obstacle of fear that we in society feel toward the criminal. And until we get over that fear we can't change anything. As an individual, I knew I had to get past that fear myself in ordr to walk in this world. And Sister Helen's book gave me the courage to do this."
Producer/Director/Writer/Filmmaker Leslie Neale is a veteran of the film business with 15 years experience both behind the camera as a production manager and assistant, and in front of the camera as an actress with roles in Clean & Sober, Gremlins II and Honey, I Blew Up The Kids, among other well known movies. Neale graduated from the University of Texas in Austin with a Bachelor of Science in Radio, TV and Film. Road to Return marks her debut as a documentary film director and producer.
www.reentrymediaoutreach.org/rr.htm
www.thedoors.com/band/john/?fa=road