The Murder of Fred Hampton
The Murder of Fred Hampton
| 01 May 1971 (USA)
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Fred Hampton was the leader of the Illinois Chapter of the Black Panther Party. This film depicts his brutal murder by the Chicago police and its subsequent investigation, but also documents his activities in organizing the Chapter, his public speeches, and the programs he founded for children during the last eighteen months of his life.

Reviews
Incannerax

What a waste of my time!!!

DipitySkillful

an ambitious but ultimately ineffective debut endeavor.

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KnotStronger

This is a must-see and one of the best documentaries - and films - of this year.

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Teddie Blake

The movie turns out to be a little better than the average. Starting from a romantic formula often seen in the cinema, it ends in the most predictable (and somewhat bland) way.

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jtgoku2426

This is definitely a documentary's documentary. This film does a great job of allowing you to see life through the eyes of those directly involved with this event.I find it just plain shocking and disgusting how those "officers of the law" who murdered Fred Hampton, who are supposed to exist for the purpose of upholding our rights yet never mind being tax-funded by us the people, for whom they exist, are bold enough to violate our rights!! It is even more outrageous that even with the -evidence- left at the scene, which blatantly contradicted the officers false testimonies, they were still allowed to walk free and unaccountable for murdering these two men with no real cause.It is because of this same corruption that our country is in the situation it is in right now; because of greed, lust for power, and lack of regard for their fellow man.Whether you agree with the cause Fred lived for or not, one thing can be certain; the rise of groups like the "Black Panthers" are a reflection of the society that we live in and how it fails to provide for its poor class while on the same token, blaming the poor class for its problems.This documentary did a great job of giving you more insight into the "Black Panther Party" and letting you know that they weren't just armed black people but that they stood for a lot more..It also makes you realize how similar the times are in terms of rights. In the film Fred refers to America as a capitalistic police state; fast forward to today were police or other govt officials can break in your house just on the mere "suspicion"of you being involved in "terrorism" lets you know that the same thing that happened to Fred can happen to anyone who thinks differently..All of this comes to mind as you hear his final quote of the film at the very end.Great job by all involved making the film at the time.

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runamokprods

A powerful last third makes up for the technical rawness (including some sections where it's hard to hear what's being said).Hampton can be initially be tough to sympathize with, especially for an audience 40+ years later, as he preaches what sounds like a hopelessly naïve call for violent revolution. But the slowly growing evidence that the so-called 'shoot-out' in which he died was nothing less than the intentional murder murder of a charismatic black leader set up by the police is deeply chilling, and makes Hampton's call to take up arms in self-defense seem a little less unreasonable in retrospect.An important reminder of a now all-but-forgotten time in our not so distant history.

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tedg

If you lived through the 60s, or if you are a student of political movements and truth, you will find this fascinating.The facts are simple enough: The US had an overtly racist political system, working differently in big northern cities than backwards southern towns. Although the major sweep of protest was a noble, steady stand for simple justice, some hotheads took a violent stand. One of these was the Black Panthers, and a stronghold was Chicago.Chicago was famously corrupt in the sense of an inbred political establishment, including the police. Loyalty to the establishment was the game and the truth was expendable, malleable, inventable. Well, that is an old story.The interesting element is the Panthers. We have this film as consisting of footage from before and after the murder. The Panthers are possibly honest but probably not so. They surely are passionate, and committed to "the people." The striking thing is how utterly stupid the politics is: a combination of plain unrealistic Marxism, uneducated rhetoric and logic and earnest but goofy metaphors. These guys are basically well-meaning, frustrated nitwits with guns, who had a genuinely honest complaint and a lucked into an adversary that was incompetent at lying.The second half of this film was produced by the Panthers (and their white lawyers) as detectivework to show the lies of the Chicago police. There is no controversy about what happened and it is instructive to compare it to today's obsession with terrorists. There is a frustrated people who take up an armed struggle. They mix their aggressiveness with service programs for an underserved society on whom they depend for support. In this case, it was breakfast and "education" programs. This is the model for Al Qaeda, Hamas and Hezbollah. A large establishment opposes them, fears about safety abound. There is a threat of overthrow, destruction. Each side vilifies the other. But one side has governmental stability and organized forces. So they do what they believe is necessary, constitution be damned.No one listening to the news actually believed the police story, neither white nor black. Whites fabulated a story to explain away the discrepancies from the truth. This differs from today where torture is openly supported rather than lied about. But otherwise this film does what the best of history can do: give us insight into ourselves.Yes, the filmmakers, presenters and detectives are not admirable. Yes, you would not want to sign up for their childish politics. Unless you are grasping for a manufactured ethnic identity, the language and means of expression grate, embarrass. But they were fighting a great lie, a great lie in front of a great injustice.And the footage is real. So this matters.Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.

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jjj522002

Fred Hampton was murdered. Because he was black and because he stood up for black rights. In Chicago, that town we all love and hate. Chicago, the town that is. In Chicago, one town we can't put a finger on. Or we can, can't we? Chicago, that great town. Love you, Fred. This small town guy in Kentucky can't pretend to know what happened. But I think I know. The police, the gov't killed you, Fred. We all know that. God and Christ and Mohammed and Islam and all peoples...how many sentences do I have to submit? OK, Fred was murdered. We all know that. Fark this minimum bulls hart. And I hope the young ones can find out what Fred died for. God support the anarchists. God support the weathermen. I support and believe in the weathermen. Come get me. I love you.

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