IMDb RATING
6.8/10
6.4K
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Fox Rich fights for the release of her husband, Rob, who is serving a 60-year sentence in prison.Fox Rich fights for the release of her husband, Rob, who is serving a 60-year sentence in prison.Fox Rich fights for the release of her husband, Rob, who is serving a 60-year sentence in prison.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 28 wins & 51 nominations total
Sibil Fox Richardson
- Self
- (as Sibll Fox Richardson)
D.L. Johnson
- Self
- (as Dr. D.L. Johnson)
Gerald Davis
- Self
- (as Dr. Gerald Davis)
Hank Williams
- Self
- (archive footage)
Garrett Bradley
- Self
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaGarett Bradley met Sibil Rich in 2016 while working on her short film Alone, a New York Times Op-Doc. She intended to make a short documentary about Rich, but when shooting wrapped, Rich gave Bradley a bag of mini-DV tapes containing some 100 hours of home videos she had recorded over the previous 18 years. At that point, Bradley transitioned the short into a feature.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Oscars (2021)
- SoundtracksThe Mad Man's Daughter
Written and Performed by Emahoy Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou
Courtesy of Emahoy Tsege Mariam Music Foundation, Inc.
Featured review
"It's almost like slavery time, like the white man keep you there until he figures it's time for you to get out." Robert Richardson's mother.
It's not what you would expect, this personal documentary narrated by Sibil Fox Richardson about the 21 years she waited for her husband, Robert, to be released from prison for a robbery he committed with her in 1997 in Shreveport, La. It is a quiet essay with almost professional grade home video for Sibil as she narrates the patient struggle to get her husband's sentence reduced from 65 years.
Although such a draconian sentence begs for the sobriquet of "Black racism," the doc, deftly directed by Garrett Bradley, makes few allusions to that societal challenge. It is rather, as its title succinctly suggests, a treatise on the passage of time with its attendant sorrows and its equally powerful hope: "God looks over the sparrows, Sibil. He's going to look over us," says Robert.
Sibil took a plea bargain of twelve years in order to attend to what would be six children, as handsome and articulate as their mom and dad. No weeping and gnashing, just melancholy longing to take time back to when the family had so much promise. Smartly, Bradley shows videos in the final shots of the family in reverse as if time could be altered but never would be.
He also makes the right decision to leave the doc in black and white in order to blend the past with the present. Unlike other documentaries about carceral injustice, Time does not demand we accept Robert as victim-it accepts his mistake and subtly suggests only that the sentence was excessive.
By showing the talented Sibil doggedly working for reform (she could have been a preacher) and her exemplary family soldiering on without dad is the best argument for careful, unbiased sentencing in a system that fails to account for incarceration's effect on everyone, the convict's family and us. Law and order sometimes forget the human factor.
"But at my back I always hear/ Time's winged chariot hurrying near." Andrew Marvel
It's not what you would expect, this personal documentary narrated by Sibil Fox Richardson about the 21 years she waited for her husband, Robert, to be released from prison for a robbery he committed with her in 1997 in Shreveport, La. It is a quiet essay with almost professional grade home video for Sibil as she narrates the patient struggle to get her husband's sentence reduced from 65 years.
Although such a draconian sentence begs for the sobriquet of "Black racism," the doc, deftly directed by Garrett Bradley, makes few allusions to that societal challenge. It is rather, as its title succinctly suggests, a treatise on the passage of time with its attendant sorrows and its equally powerful hope: "God looks over the sparrows, Sibil. He's going to look over us," says Robert.
Sibil took a plea bargain of twelve years in order to attend to what would be six children, as handsome and articulate as their mom and dad. No weeping and gnashing, just melancholy longing to take time back to when the family had so much promise. Smartly, Bradley shows videos in the final shots of the family in reverse as if time could be altered but never would be.
He also makes the right decision to leave the doc in black and white in order to blend the past with the present. Unlike other documentaries about carceral injustice, Time does not demand we accept Robert as victim-it accepts his mistake and subtly suggests only that the sentence was excessive.
By showing the talented Sibil doggedly working for reform (she could have been a preacher) and her exemplary family soldiering on without dad is the best argument for careful, unbiased sentencing in a system that fails to account for incarceration's effect on everyone, the convict's family and us. Law and order sometimes forget the human factor.
"But at my back I always hear/ Time's winged chariot hurrying near." Andrew Marvel
- JohnDeSando
- Sep 27, 2020
- Permalink
- How long is Time?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $574,361
- Runtime1 hour 21 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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