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Time

Fox Rich fights for the release of her husband, Rob, who is serving a 60-year sentence in prison.
(PG-13, 81 min.)

Showtimes

Friday, October 16, 2020

4:00 PM

Saturday, October 17, 2020

1:30 PM

Sunday, October 18, 2020

6:30 PM

Fox Rich is an entrepreneur, author, and mother of six who has spent the last 21 years fighting for the release of her husband, Rob, who is serving a 60-year sentence for an offense they both committed. She is assured and committed to sharing their story. When their sons speak to growing up without their father, they do so with a softer vulnerability than Fox can concede to. But home-video diaries she records for Rob offer unfettered glimpses into years of longing, pain, and hopeful anticipation of reuniting.
Director Garrett Bradley returns to the Sundance Film Festival (Alone won the Short Film Jury Award: Nonfiction at the 2017 Festival) with her debut feature documentary, which bears witness to the work and rituals of a woman’s decades of resilience. Commanding observations are seamlessly woven with uninhibited family videos to craft a beautifully intimate family portrait that also reminds us of the systematic separation of African American families—first through enslavement and now through mass incarceration. Time poignantly confronts and challenges expectations—this is not a story of brokenness but one of enduring love. [Sundance Institute]

Director: Garrett Bradley
Genre: Documentary

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"Blends its mournful tones and its dramatic energies with a romantic ardor and a historic grandeur."

— Richard Brody, New Yorker

"The final scenes of Time are incredibly moving as Bradley's film comes together as not so much a look at the pain of the Rich story but their overwhelming endurance."

— Brian Tallerico, RogerEbert.com

"The cumulative impact - boiled down into an open-minded and deeply empathetic 81 minutes - will almost certainly rewire how Americans think about the prison-industrial complex."

— Peter Debruge, Variety

"A vibrant cubist portrait, alive with shadings of Rich's vulnerability and the psychic bruises from dealing with an indifferent correctional system, expensive lawyers and unresponsive courts."

— Sheri Linden, Hollywood Reporter