A Time for Justice
1994 film
- 1994 (1994)
Running time
A Time for Justice is a 1994 American short documentary film produced by Charles Guggenheim. In 1995, it won an Oscar for Documentary Short Subject at the 67th Academy Awards.[1][2]
Summary
The 38-minute film, narrated by Julian Bond and featuring John Lewis, presents a short history of the Civil Rights Movement using historical footage and spoken accounts of participants. Events recounted are the Montgomery bus boycott; school integration in Little Rock, Arkansas; demonstrations in Birmingham; and the 1965 Selma to Montgomery march for voting rights.
Production
The film was produced by Guggenheim for the Southern Poverty Law Center.[3]
See also
References
External links
- A Time for Justice at Teaching Tolerance, Southern Poverty Law Center
- A Time for Justice at IMDb
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Films directed by Charles Guggenheim
- A City Decides (1956)
- The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery (1959)
- The Fisherman and His Soul (1961)
- Nine from Little Rock (1964)
- Children Without (1965)
- Monument to the Dream (1967)
- Robert Kennedy Remembered (1968)
- Jerusalem Lives (1973)
- John F. Kennedy: 1917-1963 (1979)
- HR 6161: An Act of Congress (1979)
- A Place to Be (1979)
- High Schools (1983)
- Yorktown (1983)
- The Making of Liberty (1986)
- The Johnstown Flood (1989)
- Island of Hope, Island of Tears (1989)
- Journey to America (1989)
- LBJ: A Remembrance (1990)
- A Life: The Story of Lady Bird Johnson (1992)
- A Time for Justice (1994)
- Clear Pictures (1994)
- D-Day Remembered (1994)
- The Shadow of Hate (1995)
- Harry S. Truman: 1884-1972 (1997)
- A Place in the Land (1998)
- Witnesses (1998)
- Life in the Shadows (1999)
- The First Freedom (1999)
- Berga: Soldiers of Another War (2003)