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Pahokee

The strong 2020 slate of documentaries is further fortified by Pahokee, directors Ivete Lucas and Patrick Bresnan’s observational look at the titular downtrodden Florida community through a year in the life of a diverse quartet of its high school seniors.

Reminiscent of Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady’s brilliant Detropia (2012) and the works of the filmmakers’ cited influences Frederick Wiseman and the Maysles Brothers, the work succeeds early and often through its crisp, colorful cinematography and fly-on-the-wall approach.

By following cheerleader and hopeful Miss PHS, Na’Kerria; scholar and Mexican immigrant daughter Jacobed; drumline leader and teen father Junior; and football star BJ, Pahokee presents a more authentic depiction of the community than cliché documentary components could likely achieve.

The directorial team’s commitment to letting the four youths speak for themselves is also less obtrusive and forced than traditional docs that rely on talking head interviews and heavily scripted voiceover narration to make their points.

The rare instances when the teens directly address the camera are brief iPhone confessionary moments, recorded by the subjects themselves, that add private, personal reflections that the filmmakers’ cameras likely wouldn’t have captured — even with the trust they’ve so clearly built with the youths.

The rich sense of place fosters deep connection to its inhabitants across multiple individual and connected storylines, resulting in surprisingly dramatic arcs and several well-earned gut-punch moments.

Pahokee also sagely avoids the exploitative “poverty porn” tone of recent critically-lauded docs like Hale County This Morning, This Evening and Minding the Gap. Rather than letting their subjects’ poor decisions drive the narrative or turning the squalor in which they live into a sensationalized character itself, Lucas and Bresnan maintain a soulful objectivity that gradually elevates their film to greatness.

Grade: A-minus. Not rated, but with adult language. Now available to rent via the Fine Arts Theatre

(Photo: Monument Releasing)