Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson's directorial debut, the music documentary 'Summer of Soul (...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised),' was one of the big hits at this year's virtual edition of the Sundance Film Festival, nabbing both the Documentary Grand Jury Prize and the Audience Award. It's since been acquired by Disney's Searchlight and Hulu for $12 million (a Sundance record for a documentary), and will be released later this year. While they haven't released a trailer for the documentary yet, you can watch Sundance's "Meet the Artist" video with Questlove below. We also caught a screening of the film and our review follows.
Woodstock was not the only music festival held in the summer of 1969. Down state in steamy NYC over a number of Sundays from June to August, there was the Harlem Cultural Festival held in Mount Morris Park (now known as Marcus Garvey Park). Dubbed the "Black Woodstock" and, as said in Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson's joyous look at the up-till-now not well-known event, it happened during "a time where the Negro died and the Black Man was born." It was a time of change and a reassessment of black culture. It was also a time of protest. Black soldiers were disproportionately on the front lines in the Vietnam War. As stated in the film, part of the goal of the festival was to give the community an outlet for expression following the turbulence of the previous summer that followed the killing of the Rev Dr Martin Luther King.