Marketing Poster - Women of the Movement Season 1 Episode 1 and Episode 2 [Series Premiere]
WOMEN OF THE MOVEMENT - Key Art. (ABC)

2 Comments

  1. I watched the first episode last night, after thinking long and hard about whether the “Hollywood ” treatment would make this murder too difficult to see. I was impressed that the story focused on the relationship between Emmett and his mother and on Mamie’s story. The fact that we do not see the beating and the murder, but read the horror on the faces of those who see the body – the law enforcement officers who recover it, Emmett’s family, and Mamie herself – is, in my opinion, more powerful than any gruesome make-up that could have been done. There is a glimpse of Emmett’s, arms, legs and face and from what I have seen of the original pictures, it is very accurate. What was new to me, was the the fact that the body had to be “smuggled” out of Mississippi back to Chicago. That was something I had not read before. and speaks to the depth of the callous disrespect and disregard in which the family and Emmett, himself, were held by those people. One of those little details that make up the whole picture of hatred.
    I found this episode to be beautifully crafted, not that I am in any way a critic with credentials – just a human being with a love of history and mankind – It focused on the heart and that is what, I think, Emmett’s story did – and it is what brought the United States together and what his mother wanted. I am looking forward to the other episodes in the series.

  2. Emmett Till was murdered in 1955. I was very young when it happened but as I grew older I remember hearing about it during the Civil Rights years in the US. I remember clearly seeing images of dogs and water cannons being turned on crowds of protesters, including children – I remember clearly the murders of Freedom Summer. I am Canadian and these events were covered in our newspapers. The smoke from riots in Detroit was seen clearly in Windsor Ontario and one of our greatest song writers Gordon Lightfoot wrote about it. I am not sure that I will be able to watch all of the episodes of Women of The Movement, because I feel things very deeply – I have seen the original pictures of Emmett Till’s body and I believe, like you, that a Hollywood production could not depict that horror – But this story should be told. I am not Black and maybe I have no place here, but, many of us, who grew up in my countryin the 1960s saw things and know things and feel things too. I comment with deepest respect.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.