seen from United States
seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Sweden

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from Russia

seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from TĂŒrkiye

seen from Mexico

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch âą No registration required âą HD streaming
« 17 Blocks », un film qui promet !
Le documentaire « 17 Blocks » a remportĂ© le Prix du Jury et le Prix du Public cĂŽtĂ© compĂ©tition amĂ©ricaine. Emmanuel Sanford a Ă©tĂ© filmĂ© avec sa famille depuis lâĂąge de 19 ans, et ce, sur une pĂ©riode de 20 ans.
Tribeca 2019: "17 Blocks" Review
In 1999, nine year old Emmanuel was gifted a video camera. What he captured of his family over the following years would be the most poignant home movie ever cut together. â17 Blocks,â a film by journalist, bestselling author, EmmyÂź Award-winning filmmaker, creator of Found Magazine and contributor to public radio's This American Life, Davy Rothbart, is a profound narrative piece that takes the âBoyhoodâ approach to storytelling and blows it out of the water.
â17 Blocksâ chroniclesâover two decadesâa family, which like many, deal with their share of hardships. Cheryl, the matriarch of this ever-growing family, is raising her three kids alone. She is funny and charismatic, always harboring dreams of becoming the next Marilyn Monroe. Her dreams, however, are thwarted by responsibility and a cancerous drug addiction. These tendencies surely rubbed off on her kids who lacked a proper father figure. All but Emmanuel. Emmanuel had a lust for life, a drive and compassion for those he cared for. The only one in his family to graduate high school, Emmanuel had big plans of his own. Until it was all over in a second. The opening shot of this documentary shows a rainbow touching down over Southeast Washington, D.C. However, this story is not all rainbows and butterflies.
The year Emmanuel was shot by two, masked robbers, there were over one-hundred homicides in D.C. alone. The Sanford family and Rothbart have offered us this incredibly intimate insight into their world plagued by gun violence, poverty and addiction. The home-video aspect of much of this ninety minute non-fiction piece, feels invasive. We see what Emmanuel sees. Chilling and all the more impactful. We learned from Sean Bakerâs âThe Florida Projectâ that children offer a unique perspective to narratives replete with sadness and maturity because there is a youthful spirit that contests the tragedy head on with ignorant beauty. Emmanuelâs home video offers the cruelest of memories while he smiles through it all. His infectious spirit lives on in his young nieces and nephews who miss him dearly.
There are bright moments amidst all the sorrow, but the film begs the question: Why do bad things happen to good people? A truly introspective twist of emotions, both equally saddening as infuriating. But Cheryl offers a sage response to all the pain in her life in saying, âHope is real, hope is alive, itâs what keeps us going, hope for better, hope for tomorrow.â Although she also recognizes that âsome pain doesnât go away.â
There is a moment when Emmanuelâs sister Denise is scrubbing his blood off the walls of their tiny apartment with a t-shirt rag as Beyonceâs âIrreplaceableâ plays in the background and her children look on asking, âWhere is uncle Emmanuel? Where is uncle Emmanuel?â To which all I can muster is a thank you to the Sanford family for being brave enough to share their story with the world. This film rips at the heart with focused blows. It is relentless. It is a cinematic triumph, but more importantly, it hopefully evokes change out of the people who have the ability to make an impact in these communities.
As a wise woman once said, âHope is real, hope is alive, itâs what keeps us going, hope for better, hope for tomorrow.â I like the sound of that.
Grade: A
The documentary 17 Blocks, an intimate chronicle of a DC-based familyâs struggles with addiction and gun violence, directed by Davy Rothbart will premiere at the 2019 Tribeca Film Festival.
Emmanuel Sanford-DurantÂ
Director Davy Rothbart
The documentary 17 Blocks, an intimate chronicle of a DC-based familyâs struggles with addiction and gun violence, directed by Emmy award-winning filmmaker Davy Rothbart will premiere on Saturday, April 27 at the Tribeca Film Festival in the Documentary Competition section.
In 1999, nine-year-old Emmanuel Sanford-Durant and his family began to film their daily lives in Americaâs most dangerous neighborhood â just 17 blocks behind the U.S. Capitol. Theyâve been filming ever since. Made in a unique collaboration with filmmaker and journalist Davy Rothbart, 17 BLOCKS focuses on Emmanuel, a promising student, his brother Smurf, a local drug dealer, his sister Denice, an aspiring cop, and his mother Cheryl, who must conquer her own demons for her family to prosper. Spanning two decades, 17 BLOCKS illuminates a nationâs ongoing crisis through one familyâs raw, stirring, and deeply personal saga.