The killings of two young Black people in
Chicago unleashed a wave of fury captured by film-maker Ashley O’Shay, whose stirring documentary Unapologetic follows two
Women as they rise to the challenge of leading protest
In the month that both Judas and the Black Messiah and The Trial of the Chicago 7 have racked up multiple Oscar nominations, it’s another film, one well outside the
Hollywood awards circuit, that’s bringing us up to date on the struggle for Black liberation. Unapologetic is an independently made documentary, following two young activists during four of the most tumultuous years in recent Chicago politics, as community anger mounted over the fatal
police shootings of 22-year-old Rekia Boyd and 17-year-old Laquan McDonald. Director Ashley O’Shay was herself just 22 and fresh out of film school when she moved to the city and began filming: “Like, if you were in Chicago in the fall of 2015, you must have been living under a rock if you were not aware of what young, Black folks were doing.”
If you were in Chicago in 2015, you must have been living under a rock if you were not aware of what young, Black folks were doing