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Suggestions de films similaires à 12th & Delaware
Il y a 4 films avec le même réalisateur, 8953 ayant les mêmes genres cinématographiques, 9915 films qui ont les mêmes thèmes (dont 14 films qui ont les mêmes 4 thèmes que
12th & Delaware), pour avoir au final
70 suggestions de films similaires.
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12th & Delaware, vous aimerez sûrement les films similaires suivants :
, 1h24
Réalisé par Heidi Ewing,
Rachel GradyOrigine Etats-UnisGenres DocumentaireThèmes L'enfance,
Religion,
Documentaire sur une personnalité,
Documentaire sur la religionNote73%
Le film traite du centre Kids on Fire, un rassemblement évangélique néo-charismatique pour enfants près de Devils Lake (Dakota du Nord) créé par Becky Fisher et son ministère Kids in Ministry International. Les sujets principaux du film sont des enfants qui étaient au rassemblement pendant l'été 2005 : Levi, Rachael et Tory (Victoria). Le film inclut des extraits vidéos au rassemblement et à Christ Triumphant Church à Lee's Summit (Missouri)., 1h24
Réalisé par Heidi Ewing,
Rachel GradyGenres DocumentaireThèmes Le thème de l'éducation,
L'enfance,
Documentaire sur une personnalitéNote72%
The Boys of Baraka reveals the human faces of a tragic statistic – 61 percent of Baltimore's African-American boys fail to graduate from high school; 50 percent of them go straight on to jail. Behind these figures lies the grimmer realities of streets ruled by drug dealers, families fractured by addiction and prison and a public school system seemingly surrendered to uncontrolable chaos. As simply portrayed in Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady's award-winning documentary, which has its national broadcast premiere on public television's POV, a generation of inner-city children faces dilemmas that would undo most adults. In this case, they are told early on that they face three stark "dress" options by their 18th birthdays – prison orange, a suit in a box, or a high school cap and gown.Genres DocumentaireThèmes La grossesse,
Le racisme,
Sexualité,
Documentaire sur la discrimination,
Documentaire sur le droit,
Documentaire sur une personnalité,
Documentaire sur la santéNote76%
The title comes from the Swahili term "maafa," which means tragedy or disaster and is used to describe the centuries of global oppression of African people during slavery, apartheid and colonial rule, while the number "21" refers to an alleged maafa in the 21st century (though beginning in the 19th), which the film says is the disproportionately high rate of abortion among African Americans. The film states that abortion has reduced the black population in the United States by 25 percent. It discusses some of Planned Parenthood's origins (formerly the American Birth Control League), attributing to it a "150-year-old goal of exterminating the black population." It attacks Margaret Sanger, along with other birth control advocates, as a racist eugenicist. The film features conservative African Americans who are associated with the Tea Party movement, including politician Stephen Broden, and Martin Luther King, Jr.'s niece Alveda King, who claims that Sanger targeted black people.