In 1963 segregated Alabama, a 7-year-old Black child becomes fixated on tasting water from the whites-only fountain, determined to drink from it despite the dangers.In 1963 segregated Alabama, a 7-year-old Black child becomes fixated on tasting water from the whites-only fountain, determined to drink from it despite the dangers.In 1963 segregated Alabama, a 7-year-old Black child becomes fixated on tasting water from the whites-only fountain, determined to drink from it despite the dangers.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win & 2 nominations total
Lindsey Moser
- Store Clerk
- (as Lindsay Moser)
Gwendolyn McCann
- Maybelle
- (as Gwendolyn Mulamba)
- …
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
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Featured reviews
I read the description and was enamored by it. This could either be extremely ignorant or a child friendly way of educating kids about segregation. So I checked the ratings and to my surprise it had a high rating but no actual written reviews, which is really weird. I had never seen anything like it before. The acting wasn't the best but there were a few funny moments. The description, while it represents the dream of the main character, doesn't feel super overwhelming which is good since there are about two other mini subplots going on. For a PG movie I didn't expect it to be so explicit. Seemed more like a PG - 13 movie. It has the N- Word with the hard ER just so you know. I did truly love the pictures of Jesus constantly changing to represent what Michael is feeling. I think this movie did a great job at recreating a lot of the people I used to see when I went to church as a kid. Speaking of church despite seeing many scenes with pastors and people in church, pictures of Jesus it didn't feel preachy and didn't depict "sinners" as the devil however in the beginning it did depict them as bad people. Lastly I really liked the bond that Michael formed with another kid who happened to be white (while they obviously couldn't hang out as much) I did like what the movie was trying to say. You aren't born racist, you have to be taught. Both the little boy and his mom know that their father / husband wouldn't appreciate seeing white and black people in any type of relationship. The ending was a bit unbelievable but I still expected it from the very beginning.
Did you know
- TriviaWhite Water won the Grand Jury Prize at the Jasmine International film festival In Tehran, Iran in 2017.
- How long is White Water?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 24 minutes
- Color
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