The Rape Of Recy Taylor
Year: 2018Certificate: 15
The Rape of Recy Taylor is a documentary about a 24-year old black mother and
sharecropper who was gang raped by six white men in 1944 Alabama. She spoke up at
the time and identified her rapists. The NAACP sent Rosa Parks, their chief investigator
(and civil rights activist) to look into the case. Her representation and the community's
rallied support triggered an unprecedented outcry for justice. She spoke up long before the
#MeToo movement.
Written and directed by acclaimed filmmaker Nancy Buirski, whose credits include Loving
(as producer), The Loving Story and By Sidney Lumet. In talking about the story, Buirski
has said that "Recy is very reluctant hero ... She understood she had to speak up if she
wanted to help other women. People like Rosa convinced her it was a crime."
Based on the "New History of the Civil Rights Movement from Rosa Parks to the Rise of
Black Power" book by historian Danielle L McGuire At the Dark End of the Street: Black
Women, Rape and Resistance.
Recy Taylor is the woman who inspired Rosa Parks in 1944 and inspires Oprah Winfrey
today. Winner of the prestigious Human Rights Nights Special Prize at the 74th Venice
Film Festival and nominated for Best Documentary at the NAACP Image Awards.
Recy Taylor is the woman who inspired Rosa Parks in 1944 and inspires Oprah Winfrey today. Winner of the prestigious Human Rights Nights Special Prize at the 74th Venice Film Festival and nominated for Best Documentary at the NAACP Image Awards.