Belly of the Beast Documentary Aims to Uncover Injustices Faced by Incarcerated Women

Belly of the Beast, a powerful documentary film about the human rights abuses experienced by women at the hands of the criminal justice system, will premiere on Thursday during the Human Rights Watch Film Festival at 6:30 p.m. ET. A Q&A with the filmmakers is set to take place at 8:00 p.m. ET, and those…

Belly of the Beast, a powerful documentary film about the human rights abuses experienced by women at the hands of the criminal justice system, will premiere on Thursday during the Human Rights Watch Film Festival at 6:30 p.m. ET. A Q&A with the filmmakers is set to take place at 8:00 p.m. ET, and those who are interested can watch here.

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Walter Davis On Building a Black-Owned Bank From Zero to $2 billion
Walter Davis On Building a Black-Owned Bank From Zero to $2 billion

The filmโ€™s Peabody Award-winning director Erika Cohn says the film is necessary to highlight the injustices faced by women who are incarcerated, such as โ€œprofound lack of resources, attention and interestโ€ in their stories.

โ€œAdditionally, the immense dehumanization and fear of retaliation often inhibits incarcerated peopleโ€™s voices from being heard, further marginalizing an already โ€˜near-invisible population,โ€ she says in a statement.

The film features the Central California Womenโ€™s Facility, the worldโ€™s largest womenโ€™s prison. Due to the inconspicuous rural area where the facility is located, reproductive and human rights violations transpiring inside its walls go largely unnoticed. In order to uncover these wrongdoings, a woman โ€œwho was involuntarily sterilized at the facility, teams up with a radical lawyerโ€ to bring awareness to the issue and stop the violations through investigations into crimes against womenโ€”primarily, women of color.

โ€œTogether, with a team of tenacious heroines, both in and out of prison, they take to the courtroom to fight for reparations. But no one believes them,โ€ the synopsis reads. โ€œAs additional damning evidence is uncovered by the Center for Investigative Reporting, a media frenzy and series of hearings provide hope for some semblance of justice. Yet, doctors and prison officials contend that the procedures were in each personโ€™s best interest and of an overall social benefit.โ€

โ€œThe silence on imprisonment of women echoes the deafening silence on the disappearance and death of women, girls and transgender people of color,โ€ Cynthia Chandler, a prison abolitionist and attorney featured in the film, explains. โ€œThe invisibility of people in womenโ€™s prisons is emblematic of a lack of value placed on the health and well-being of women and transgender people of color and impoverished people of all races.โ€

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