RESOLVED (90 mins)
Dir: Greg Whiteley
Post screening Q+A with director Greg Whiteley.
The fascinating complexity of high school debate gives way to a
portrait of the equally complex racial and class bias of American
education in Greg Whiteley's riveting documentary. Initially a portrait
of top-flight debaters from well-funded, mostly white schools-like
nationally ranked Sam Iola and Matt Andrews of Highland Park, Texas-the
film deepens when it changes focus to Richard Funches and Louis
Blackwell from Long Beach's Jordan squad. While gifted traditional
debaters in their own right, the two decide to challenge the usefulness
of the jargon-filled, 400-word-per-minute style of modern debate (known
as "the spread") by steering their debates toward issues of personal
experience and dialogue. What is the use of refining an argument, they
stress, when it does not affect the reality of a person's locale and
particular life? Why must individual perspective and bias be masked?
For many, these questions present such a radical interpretive shift
that competitors and judges crumble in front of them. Contrasting
Fuches and Blackwell's attempt to challenge the system with Andrews'
relentless pursuit to excel in it and win the prestigious Tournament of
Champions, Whiteley deftly explores the disparities between the
debaters, their styles, and their resources. Alternately inspiring and
polarizing, Resolved reveals a constantly shifting sport that is as
much philosophy as competition. - Travis Miles (Los Angeles Film
Festival)