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The 13th

Original title: 13th
  • 2016
  • 18
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
8.2/10
39K
YOUR RATING
The 13th (2016)
An in-depth look at the prison system in the United States and how it reveals the nation's history of racial inequality.
Play trailer2:15
2 Videos
37 Photos
History DocumentaryPolitical DocumentaryCrimeDocumentaryHistory

An in-depth look at the prison system in the United States and how it reveals the nation's history of racial inequality.An in-depth look at the prison system in the United States and how it reveals the nation's history of racial inequality.An in-depth look at the prison system in the United States and how it reveals the nation's history of racial inequality.

  • Director
    • Ava DuVernay
  • Writers
    • Spencer Averick
    • Ava DuVernay
  • Stars
    • Melina Abdullah
    • Michelle Alexander
    • Cory Booker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.2/10
    39K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ava DuVernay
    • Writers
      • Spencer Averick
      • Ava DuVernay
    • Stars
      • Melina Abdullah
      • Michelle Alexander
      • Cory Booker
    • 121User reviews
    • 104Critic reviews
    • 81Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 32 wins & 47 nominations total

    Videos2

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:15
    Official Trailer
    A Guide to the Films of Ava DuVernay
    Clip 1:35
    A Guide to the Films of Ava DuVernay
    A Guide to the Films of Ava DuVernay
    Clip 1:35
    A Guide to the Films of Ava DuVernay

    Photos37

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    + 32
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Melina Abdullah
    Melina Abdullah
    • Self - Chair, Pan-African Studies, California State University, Los Angeles
    Michelle Alexander
    Michelle Alexander
    • Self - Educator and Author, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness
    Cory Booker
    Cory Booker
    • Self - U.S. Senator (D) New Jersey
    Dolores Canales
    Dolores Canales
    • Self - Formerly Incarcerated Activist…
    Gina Clayton
    Gina Clayton
    • Self - Attorney and Founder, Essie Justice Group
    Jelani Cobb
    Jelani Cobb
    • Self - Professor of African-American Studies, University of Connecticut
    Malkia Cyril
    Malkia Cyril
    • Self - Executive Director of the Center for Media Justice
    Angela Davis
    Angela Davis
    • Self - Professor Emerita, UC Santa Cruz
    Craig DeRoche
    Craig DeRoche
    • Self - Formerly Incarcerated Activist…
    David Dinkins
    David Dinkins
    • Self - 106th Mayor of New York City (D)
    Baz Dreisinger
    Baz Dreisinger
    • Self - Educator and Author, Incarceration Nations
    Kevin Gannon
    Kevin Gannon
    • Self - Professor of History, Grandview University
    Henry Louis Gates Jr.
    Henry Louis Gates Jr.
    • Self - Professor of History, Harvard University
    Marie Gottschalk
    Marie Gottschalk
    • Self - Professor of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania
    Newt Gingrich
    Newt Gingrich
    • Self - 50th Speaker of the House of Representatives, 2012 Republican Presidential Candidate
    Lisa Graves
    Lisa Graves
    • Self - Executive Director, Center for Media and Democracy
    Cory Greene
    Cory Greene
    • Self - Formerly Incarcerated Activist…
    John Hagan
    John Hagan
    • Self - Professor of Sociology and Law, Northwestern University
    • Director
      • Ava DuVernay
    • Writers
      • Spencer Averick
      • Ava DuVernay
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews121

    8.238.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10akaj95

    In response

    There is something to be said of a person who does not know when to stop and listen a message that has left them in the past. I watched this film and cried because I have spent my adult life keeping myself and my children out of the "system". I have spent teaching my children that they are more than what white society is trying to pin on them. To read a review that basically regurgitates all of the right leaning rhetoric that, if they watched the film, started at the very beginning of slavery. The US was/is built on the backs of other races that the US has no intention acknowledge. The history that is taught in the US not only white washes (pun intended) but also teaches to have pride in a misrepresented history. To find out what contributions brown and black people made to this country is an elective in college that most white Americans will never even glance at. So to say that this film is one sided...yes it is but white America has had it one sided for over 400 years with all the strength, weight, industrial, and political power at its disposal. SO, go a look at the history from a perspective other than Rush Limbaugh and the like. You just might finally understand that brown and black lives are not a tool for whites to use at a whim but humans that have the RIGHT to be treated the same......
    10Quinoa1984

    Systemic connections - a brilliant, muckraking, heartbreaking look at America

    It's not enough to look at one thing to analyze what is wrong with it, is a key point that may get overlooked (or simply not exactly the focus, but between the lines) in Ava DuVernay's powerful indictment of an entire society. When you look at the systemic issues of racism in this country, slavery is the key thing, and the title refers to the 13th amendment to the constitution (need a cinematic reference point, see Spielberg's Lincoln for more), and how one small line in the amendment referring to how slavery is outlawed except, kinda, sorta, for criminals, is paramount in how black people and bodies have been treated in the 150 years since the end of the Civil War.

    Because at extremely crucial times in history, like right after the signing of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights acts, black people were not in positions of power or government or, of course, in business (as this doc goes very in depth on), figures who spouted 'Law and Order' and "War on Drugs" made life not a matter of inconvenience or difficult for blacks, it was more like a refitting or metamorphosis of the sort of principle that went into slavery - keep everyone repressed and afraid, and if they get out of line they have to work and work for no wages and have little rights - into the modern age. Anyone can look up the statistics about how high the prison incarceration rates have gone up over the past 45 years (this despite the fact that, at least since the 1990's, crime rates have gone down generally speaking nationwide), and particularly for African Americans the struggle is that, well, 1 out of 3 black men will go to prison in their lifetimes (vs how much smaller that ratio is for whites).

    DuVernay's film is a mix of a variety of talking heads, muckraking information that might be out of a Michael Moore film about things like the ALEC company and the like who formulate actual legislation that is pro-for-profit prisons, and footage from the likes of Nixon and Reagan's most damning points looking "Presidential" while distorting the truth (and the even more damning points from their advisers caught on tape how they actually were going about specifically going after minorities as "threats" to the system). Constantly here, the thing is, nothing is in a vacuum. What we see from The Birth of a Nation by Griffith (incidentally I saw this doc mere hours after seeing Parker's new film, so this almost picks up where he left off), was that there actually was a film that one can say really did inspire people to commit acts of violence: hyping up the KKK to become a dominant force after years of being dormant and unpopular, by painting blacks as the "savages" that will come and rape and pillage your precious whites.

    So much in that film may seem awful and hateful now, but also these sorts of images continue to be perpetuated, is what DuVernay is saying, and things are interconnected all the time; what happened with the Central Park Five in 1989; Willie Horton; Bill Clinton's crime bill; Mandatory Mininums; Trayvon Martin and Ferguson; all of these companies making bills for politicians that they can literally *fill in the blank* with their state name, which calls to question what a country is if corporations are writing bills. There's so much to unpack in the film, but as a director DuVernay keeps things moving at a pace that is electrifying but also never hard to take in. I'd want to watch this again more-so to admire the touches of filmmaking, all of the text pieces she puts up to accompany song transitions (Public Enemy for one), than even to take in pieces of information she puts out.

    Also fascinating is how she puts the variety of talking heads here: we get people like Charlie Rangel (who was once very tough on crime and regrets it today) and mayor David Dinkins and Cory Booker and Angela Davis, but we also get to see Newt Gingrich and Grover Norquist and a sort of spokesman for one of these ALEC type of companies (I forget his name). Having them juxtaposed with figures who have seen how awful this country has treated people of color in the justice system with drug laws that are meant to make criminal (that's a word that comes back again and again) makes for a viewing experience that can be startling but it keeps you on your toes. Will they possibly say something reasonable or reprehensible? Some watching it may not even know who Norquist is - I should think DuVernay made this film to last, not just for the 2016 year, albeit clips from Clinton and Trump, the latter some of the explosive racist moments at his campaign stops in the crowds, make it timely - but it shouldn't matter too much.

    13th gives you a massive amount of facts and statistics, but it's never a lecture, and if it's a plea it's that people should realize real reforms don't or really can't happen overnight. Minds and attitudes need to change on a more fundamental level, where *centuries* of oppression have kept metastasizing like a cancer. And at the center of it is DuVernay creating a conversation and narrative that inspires a great many emotions, mostly sadness and anger, but is just as palpable as in her film Selma. A must-see.
    7lsyves

    Interesting but One-Sided

    Most documentaries I have seen lately (on a variety of topics) have been one-sided, so it's fine if you know that going into it. This was well done, though, and shed a lot of light on current events, but also the events leading up to the explosive times we now find ourselves in.

    ***I took slight issue with the Assata Shakur and Angela Davis section. Do your research and find out why their portrayal is controversial for some (Shakur more than Davis).***

    I think everyone should watch this one. Empathy and kindness towards the oppressed will only come for some if they would just educate themselves just a little bit, and then continue on to educate themselves further. We all have much work to do.
    9cliftonofun

    Watch the movie...then read "The New Jim Crow"

    The voices and arguments here are not new. Read "The New Jim Crow." Read "Just Mercy." Read any critical analysis of modern American jurisprudence. But this film brilliantly assembles disparate voices (Newt Gingrich and Jelani Cobb? Together? Really?) to tell the story...to tell our story. DuVernay finds our nation's narrative arc. It may be disturbing, but it is also true. As the prison population ticks up, so does your understanding of who we have been and who we are becoming.
    10shaunemmons

    I stand in amazement

    The documentary is an excellent summary of American History. To a larger degree it is important to address some of the comments made. I find several people's comments such as, "don't do the crime, if you can't do the time" indicative of the very systemic racism that was the impetus for the need of such a piece. The comments are very telling and actually say more about the people writing them than do their intentions to demean the documentary by leaving negative reviews.

    The fact that people can disregard this for the myriad of completely shallow reasons such as, "I stopped watching when I realized it was against Trump and for Hillary" is laughable. The reality is that you don't want to accept America's REAL history. The documentary was well over an hour and the section about the presidential race was a minute fraction of that.

    Again, shallow reasons such as this speak volumes about the people leaving them. America's history is what it is. None of us are proud of these particular aspects or at least you shouldn't be but in an effort to get better we must first accept the truth. This is the truth. Acceptance is the first step towards getting better. It is so not about Trump or Hillary. I almost don't think you actually watched because no reasonably intelligent person would dismiss the piece as you guys did for the reasons you chose.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The filming locations and production design of the interviews, with brick walls and industrial equipment, represent labor that, according to DuVernay, "has been stolen from black people in this country for centuries."
    • Quotes

      Bryan Stevenson: The Bureau of Justice reported that one in three young black males is expected to go to jail or prison during his lifetime, which is an unbelievably shocking statistic.

    • Connections
      Featured in 13th: A Conversation with Oprah Winfrey & Ava DuVernay (2017)
    • Soundtracks
      Letter To The Free
      Performed by Common featuring Bilal

      Music and Lyrics by Common, Karriem Riggins, Robert Glasper

      Courtesy of Artium Records/Def Jam Recordings

      Under license from Universal Music Enterprises

      Arranged and Composed by Karriem Riggins and Robert Glasper

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    FAQ18

    • How long is 13th?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 7, 2016 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Facebook
      • Netflix
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 13th
    • Filming locations
      • 16th Street Station, Oakland, California, USA(background)
    • Production companies
      • Forward Movement
      • Kandoo Films
      • Netflix
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $566
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • D-Cinema 48kHz 5.1
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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