Bisbee '17 - Screening event at the Nerve Centre
CCA is proud to premiere the genre-busting documentary, Bisbee ’17. Relating to ideas around borders, trauma and care, as well as immigration, political corruption and collective memory, this screening is one of a number of events that form the public programme for our exhibition Urgencies.
Bisbee ’17 is a nonfiction feature film by award-winning filmmaker Robert Greene set in Bisbee, Arizona, an old mining town just miles away from both Tombstone and the Mexican border. Radically combining collaborative documentary, western and musical elements, the film follows several members of the close knit community as they attempt to reckon with their town’s darkest hour. In 1917, nearly two-thousand immigrant miners, on strike for better wages and safer working conditions, were violently rounded up by their armed neighbours, herded onto cattle cars, shipped to the middle of the New Mexican desert and left there to die. This long-buried and largely forgotten event came to be known as the Bisbee Deportation.
The film documents locals as they play characters and stage dramatic scenes from the controversial story, culminating in a large scale recreation of the deportation itself on the exact day of its 100th anniversary. These dramatised scenes are based on subjective versions of the story and offer conflicting views of the event, underscoring the difficulty of collective memory, while confronting the current political predicaments of immigration, unionisation, environmental damage and corporate corruption with direct, haunting messages about solidarity and struggle.
Please note: this screening will take place in the Nerve Centre Cinema at 7pm on Thursday January 31.