The Work

The Work

There is a moment in The Work when a man utters a sound that I’ve never heard emerge from another human being. It is a cry of both anguish and relief, as if a levee has broken after a lifetime of repressed emotions, and the flood waters are finally free. It is the crack of a soul shedding its cocoon so that a new way of being can emerge from the wreckage. It is the groan of liberation.

Liberation is something that every person in the The Work longs for, even if they think they’re already free. The documentary follows a small group of civilians who are invited to participated in a multi-day group therapy “retreat” inside Folsom State Prison. What starts off as a chance for prisoners and men from the outside to interact and learn from each other gradually transforms into a therapeutic exploration of personal traumas, interpersonal judgments, and systemic injustice.

There have been several recent films and documentaries about our prison-industrial complex and racist system of mass incarceration, but The Work is something different. Aside from its opening and closing seconds, there are no facts or “talking heads” to be found here. The camera simply sits and observes men as they participate in group discussions, visualizations, and bioenergetic exercises, all done with the intent of helping them identify emotional scars and paths to healing. This cinema verite approach avoids intellectualizing “the issues” in abstract terms, effectively making the viewer a part of the process. The lines between “prisoner” and “outsider” or “subject” and “audience” are gradually erased, so what’s left is simply a collection of human beings all struggling to live the best possible life.

During a time of social unrest and looming environmental catastrophe, The Work is a reminder that there is value in that struggle, that healing is not a lost cause. Some of the men find it easy to talk about their emotions and experiences. Others resist. But what remains constant is the support of those around them and the safety of the container they build to hold whatever comes up. For every cry of grief or expression of regret, there’s another man present to say, “I’ll go there with you. I won’t let anything happen. I got you.” We’ve all got work to do, the film seems to say, but with community, freedom is possible. The world is ready to be liberated, one person at the time.

Andrew Johnson (2020)

  1. Directed by: Jairus McLeary
    Gethin Aldous
  2. Produced by: Miles McLeary Angela Sostre Jairus McLeary James McLeary Eon McLeary Gethin Aldous Rob Albee Alice Henty
  3. Written by:
  4. Music by:
  5. Cinematography by: Arturo Santamaria
  6. Editing by: Amy Foote
  7. Release Date: 2017
  8. Running Time: 89
  9. Language: English

Arts & Faith Lists:

2020 Top 100 — #89

Similar Posts

  • The Son

    It’s tricky to review The Son without raising viewers’ expectations. To rave about the film’s artistry might create a certain anticipation of being dazzled. But, “the truth must dazzle gradually,” and The Son — like all of the Dardenne Brothers’ films — is the antithesis of what most moviegoers consider “entertainment.” It is, rather, a story that unfolds without…

  • The Burmese Harp

    Kon Ichikawa’s deeply humane, spiritually resonant masterpiece is routinely but reductionistically described as “pacifist” or “anti-war.” War, though, is the occasion for the central theme, not the theme itself, which is nothing less than the intractable mystery of suffering and evil, affirmation of spiritual values, and the challenge to live humanely in evil circumstances. Adapted…

  • Becket

    A film that has often invited comparisons to A Man for All Seasons (Top 100 #31), Becket is also the story of a high official in Britain who chooses God over king and is slain for his beliefs. Thomas Becket begins the movie as the king’s closest friend, and thus his transformation into God’s man and the king’s opponent…

  • Dekalog

    “What is the true meaning of life?” Polish director Krzysztof Kieslowski has asked. “Why get up in the morning? Politics doesn’t answer that.” The Decalogue, Kieslowski’s extraordinary, challenging collection of ten one-hour films made for Polish television in the dying days of the Soviet Union, doesn’t answer Kieslowski’s questions either. What it does is pose them…

  • L’Avventura

    L’Avventura (1960) has long been known as the first feature in Michelangelo Antonioni’s “alienation” trilogy, which includes La Notte (1961) and L’Eclisse (1962). Yet the term “alienation” is too simple and too succinct a descriptor; this film is about emotional, social, and spiritual enervation, about something nightmarish. The inhabitants of Antonioni’s post-industrial, post-war West are profoundly sick, dysfunctional, wayward, and…

  • M

    Fritz Lang and Peter Lorre accomplish a remarkable feat in M (1931). They humanize child murderer Hans Beckert. Suspenseful, drenched in tragedy, M brings the audience through Beckert’s harrowing final days as he evades both police and the criminal underground. Beckert’s frantic efforts to escape the tightening noose echo his attempts to overcome his compulsion. A scratched and worn…