From Time Magazine...
Carry It On, a gentle documentary about
draft resistance, surprises with the subtle force of its
argument and stuns through the sincerity of its two
leading figures, Singer Joan Baez and her husband, the
nonviolent activist David Harris. Shot in cinema
verite format over a period of four months last
summer, Carry It On revolves around Harris'
arrest in July for noncooperation with the draft. The
film begins with scenes of Harris addressing a rally of
California high school students and being arrested. It
shows his wife meeting him on his release from jail, and
moves on to fleeting glimpses of their home life, which
is suddenly shattered when David is taken off to begin
his three-year prison term. Then the cameras go on the
road with Mr. Harris, show her in concert and in
conference, talking politics and counseling nonviolent
resistance. The film is directed with great sympathy by
three young film makers working out of Cambridge, Mass.:
Christopher G. Knight, Robert Jones, and James Coyne.
Their work is at its straightforward best in depicting
the relationship between the Harrises. When Joan meets
David at the jail after the high school rally, there is a
scene of extraordinary intimacy. David comes smiling out
of the station door; Joan and some friends crowd around
him. She takes his arm, smiles back at him, and they walk
away together. That is all; yet the sequence and her
simple gesture express a strong and lasting bond. Carry
It On is not only a love story. The Harrises give
the film considerable ideological intensity. Even those
who violently disagree with them will find their
conversation refreshinly free of cant and full of
infectious urgency. The movie may not convert doubters,
but it may well make them turn their doubt, however
briefly, upon themselves. - Jay Cocks |
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Contact:
Prof. Bob Jones
University of Central Florida
Film Department
Orlando, FL 32816
Email: dodgeuniversity@aol.com
(407) 823-3309
Web site created by Wade Holt Worth Rudolph