Fireworks Logo

Trailers...

  • My Sweet Child
  • It Needs Eyes
  • Bookish
  • Hurt
  • Mysterious Behaviors
  • Snare of Evil
  • Cuidadoras
  • First Lady (The)
  • Noah's Arc: The Movie
  • Franklin
  • Thunderbolts*
  • Beneath the Scar: A Story of Resilience
  • Krishna Arjun
  • Eva i Bea
  • Velvet Vision: The Story of James Bidgood and the Making of Pink Narcissus
  • Man with Sole: The Impact of Kenneth Cole (A)
  • Only Good Things
  • Transaction
  • Lioness
  • On the Streets (of Lagos)
  • Then & Now
  • Christmas Reunion (A)
  • Songs Inside
  • We Exist
  • Side Effects
  • Loulou
  • Murderbot
  • VIH: La causa justa
  • Teacher's Pet
  • More Perfect Union (A)
  • Next to Us
  • I Was Born This Way
  • Hal & Harper
  • State of Firsts
  • Outerlands
  • Secret Lives of My Three Men (The)
  • Latter-Day Glory: The Aftermath of Growing Up Queer in the LDS Church
  • Monk in Pieces
  • Flamingo Camp
  • Lurker

Move Ya Body: The Birth of House

Country: United States, Language: English, 88 mins

  • Director: Elegance Bratton
  • Writer: Elegance Bratton
  • Producer: Chester Algernal Gordon, Andrew Blau, Elegance Bratton, Kanani Datan, Geralyn White Dreyfous, John Driscoll, Lauren Driscoll, Morgan Earnest, David Fialkow, Nina Sing Fialkow, Lauren Haber, Bill Harnisch, Ruth Ann Harnisch, Kelsey Koenig, Adam Lewis, Melony Lewis, Geoff Martz, Okey Onyiuke, Patty Quillin, Jenny Raskin, Brenda Robinson, Luke Rodgers, Rick Rosenthal, Siobhan Sinnerton, Nancy Stephens, Katrina vanden Heuvel, Johnny Webb, Roger Ross Williams

CGiii Comment

Out of the underground dance clubs on the South Side of Chicago, a group of friends turn a new sound into a global movement.

Vince Lawrence was an eccentric, nerdy Black child growing up in Mayor Daley’s segregated Chicago. One summer when his dad couldn’t afford to send him to summer camp, Lawrence embarked on a personal journey that would lead him to become the first person to record a house song. He catalyzed a force of radical togetherness that would break down his city’s invisible walls of segregation, and fundamentally transform the music world.

Director Elegance Bratton concocts a loving mix of interviews with the lively characters of house music blended together with an archive treasure, creating a definitive history of a cultural revolution rarely told. Move Ya Body: The Birth of Chicago House is a road map of how a rebellion against bodily repression can clutch joy and creative expression to sidestep empire.—Shari Frilot


No trailer...