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The People's Advocate: The Life And Times Of Charles R. Garry

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  • The People's Advocate: The Life And Times Of Charles R. Garry

    THE PEOPLE'S ADVOCATE: THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CHARLES R. GARRY
    By Sura Wood

    Hollywood Reporter
    Nov 27 2007

    Bottom Line: Low-budget documentary shines a light on a lesser known
    hero of the Left and puts him in the context of his times.

    Mill Valley Film Festival

    The Free History Project

    MILL VALLEY, Calif. -- Charles R. Garry, the controversial
    working-class lawyer who defended '60s protestors and the Black
    Panthers, is venerated in Hrag Yedalian's admiring documentary, "The
    People's Advocate: The Life and Times of Charles R. Garry." A bare
    bones, ragged-around-the-edges enterprise, the film is nonetheless
    an illuminating portrait of a driven, deeply committed man and the
    turbulent era he lived in. First-time filmmaker Yedalian, who spent
    four years on this project, compiles television interviews with Garry,
    archival news footage of his trials and testimonials and reminiscences
    from a Who's Who of '60s radicals such as Huey P. Newton, Bobby
    Seale, Angela Davis and David Hilliard as well as Garry's brothers
    and assorted friends.

    Garry didn't cut a particularly impressive figure or display the zeal
    for self-promotion of William Kunstler. Rather he was a soft-spoken,
    understated man, who looked more like a corporate vp than a tireless,
    civil rights advocate for the Left and the political radical's go to
    guy. The son of Armenian immigrants, Garry understood discrimination
    first hand. He grew up dirt poor in Fresno, studied law at night school
    and became a passionate, articulate defender of the disenfranchised
    and oppressed with whom he identified.

    According to the film, he was a daunting adversary in the courtroom
    with a winning track record and a knack for putting the justice
    system on trial. In a few instances, Yedalian is given to hyperbole
    and overstates his case for how Garry revolutionized the legal system.

    Garry represented Rev. Jim Jones and was present during the mass
    suicide at the compound in Guyana. Although Garry escaped unharmed and
    claimed that he wasn't aware of what was happening, his reputation was
    irreparably tarnished by the incident. Friends say that he returned
    a broken man and was never the same.

    In 1991, he died of a stroke. Yedalian also includes a fascinating
    interview with Jones' son that adds a chilling coda to his father's
    thirst for domination and its impact on Garry's life.

    The Apex Theory provides the offbeat, original score.

    http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/awards _festivals/fest_reviews/article_display.jsp?JSESSI ONID=ThJ1HLKNLn1jSkbrTJvLK1ln62P2GRjpkTnJ8gdLN9Wj7 DG4QkLY!1504578851&&rid=10240

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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