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One of the things I thoroughly appreciated about the film Jezebel was that it didn’t lean on the typical exploitative hyper-sexualized stereotypes of black girls. Instead, it embraced our sexual identities like the warmest hug.
Recently acquired by Ava DuVernay’s ARRAY, Numa Perrier’s Jezebel, which premiered last year at SXSW, is set to debut on Netflix.
In The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open, two Indigenous women cross paths on a city bus line in East Vancouver, British Columbia; a mundane, everyday scene—until it isn’t.
Ava DuVernay’s ARRAY Releasing has acquired the coming-of-age drama Jezebel directed, written, produced by and co-starring Numa Perrier.
There’s a crucial scene near the midpoint of the Canadian drama “The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open,” and it brilliantly illuminates the experiential chasm between its two leads.
A two-hander told in real time, ‘The Body Remembers When the World Broke Open,’ distributed by Ava DuVernay’s Array, explores domestic violence, class and racism through the experiences of two young women.
Phillip Youmans shot the movie the summer before his senior year of high school — and made one of the year’s breakout indies.
At the Tribeca Film Festival in New York earlier this year, Phillip Youmans made history. The 19-year-old director took home the top prize at the festival, the Founders Award for Best Narrative Feature, for his debut Burning Cane—the first Black director in Tribeca history to do so.
For Ava DuVernay’s film distribution and resource collective ARRAY, it’s never been business as usual.