|
"By the People"
Putting elections together in small towns across America is a daunting
challenge of organizational skill and dedication for bands of government
workers and volunteers. In this case study of one such event in
Indianapolis, Indiana, Malindi Fickle centers her camera on County Clerk
Doris Anne Sadler as the engine behind the complex undertaking.
The distribution of ballots, voting machines and all necessary
paraphernalia, the training and assignments of poll workers, dealing
with legal questions, party differences, shortages, time pressure, lack
of resources, and an utmost desire to do it correctly make for a piece
of work that's not for the timid or the weak.
Sadler, an elected official, guides her small crew of government
employees and volunteers with leadership aplomb and cool reserve, ever
able to field questions and put fires out through election day. Our
witnessing of her days of effort through Fickle's documentary gives a
renewed feeling of appreciation for the effort involved to make our
institutions of democracy work at the baseline, the ballot box, and do
it every time it's needed.
The documentary approach is straightforward and as determined as the
electoral subject itself, displaying nothing very special in the
technique behind the story telling. Lots of footage, assembled with the
chronology of the event into a natural structure.
As a reminder of our civic duties and a call for manpower in the form of
volunteers, it works well. After 2-day theatrical runs around the
country, "By the People" will air in October on PBS stations nationwide.
Feel the call.
|