American filmmaker Laura Poitras, known for her award-winning 2014 documentary on former U.S. intelligence สล็อต ฝาก-ถอน true wallet contractor Edward Snowden and his revelations about the National Security Agency, has once again turned her camera on the watchmen.
In an exhibition that opened Friday in Berlin, Poitras examines the way the state monitors citizens' lives — both abroad and at home, in New York City.
While her early work on the war in Iraq and the US government surveillance apparatus — including the Oscar-winning “Citizenfour” — follows the long trail of the Sept. 11 attacks, Poitras' new show grapples with the issues of the past year: The COVID-19 pandemic and the fight for racial justice.
The goal remains, Poitras said, to “create experience that has emotional resonance.”
“I want to interrogate power,” she told The Associated Press in an interview ahead of the show's launch.
Together with artist Sean Vegezzi, Poitras puts viewers outside an NYPD outpost in Queens used by the Technical Assistance Response Unit, whose role is to monitor political protests. The unit employs military technology to gather intelligence, including on recent Black Lives Matter rallies, but officers seem unaware that they are being watched as they enter and leave the building.
A second video combines exterior shots of the Vernon C. Bain prison barge on the East River with three months of intercepted radio recordings between guards discussing the apparent use of force against inmates. The crowded prison — set up as a temporary facility almost three decades ago — saw high death rates from COVID-19 last year.
Poitras and Vegezzi said they were surprised that the prison's continued existence and the conditions there haven't been taken up by local politicians, given that most of the inmates are local residents awaiting trial for minor crimes.
“As a New Yorker I hope that it's difficult to look at this prison ship and know that you are complicit in it,” Poitras said, admitting: “We are interested in getting this shut down.”
The series is completed with a visit to little-known Hart Island, home to one of the largest mass grave sites in the United States with burials dating back to the Civil War era. Vegezzi, whose brother was among a prison detail from Rikers Island tasked with burying the dead, used a drone to show how detainees with little social distancing or protective equipment stacked coffins in deep trenches at the height of the pandemic. The Department of Corrections halted the practice after it became public last year.