NEW YORK, NY.- Film Forum will present the U.S. theatrical premiere of Suzannah Herberts NATCHEZ on Friday, January 30.
Natchez, Mississippi: a town of 15,000 that, for generations, has drawn tourists to its immaculately restored antebellum mansions, hosted by hoop-skirted white matriarchs, for an experience dubbed Pilgrimage. As interest declines in and questions arise about showcasing these regal estates with tall tales of the Old South, Natchez faces a reckoningwith a romanticized, sanitized historical narrative and the debt it owes to the descendants of enslaved people. Directed by Suzannah Herberta documentary filmmaker whose work focuses on the American SouthNATCHEZ follows owners of historic plantations, local activists and politicians, and both white and African American tour guides as they tell their ever-more conflicting versions of the town's past, and of American history.
NATCHEZ had its world premiere at the 2025 Tribeca Festival where it was awarded the prize for Best Documentary and Special Jury Awards for cinematography (Noah Collier) and editing (Pablo Proenza). It was also featured at Charlotte Film Festival (Winner: Documentary Feature Audience Award), Philadelphia Film Festival (Winner: Best Documentary Feature), and more. NATCHEZ was named one of the Top 5 Documentaries of the Year by the National Board of Review and was awarded for Best Editing at the International Documentary Association IDA Awards.
Executive Producer Sam Pollard has been called one of cinemas most dedicated chroniclers of the Black experience in America. He has collaborated with Spike Lee since 1990, editing and co-producing a number of Lees films. Pollard has directed and produced SLAVERY BY ANOTHER NAME (PBS), AUGUST WILSON: THE GROUND ON WHICH I STAND (American Masters), TWO TRAINS RUNNIN (American Masters), and more. His 2020 film MLK/FBI (IFC Films) was shortlisted for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
Darcy McKinnon is a documentary filmmaker whose work focuses on the American South and the Caribbean. Recently released projects include A KING LIKE ME and ROLEPLAY, premiering at SXSW 2024, COMMUTED (PBS, 2024), ALGIERS, AMERICA (Hulu, 2023), UNDER G-D (Sundance 2023), LOOK AT ME! XXXTENTACION (SXSW, Hulu, 2022) and THE NEUTRAL GROUND (Tribeca, POV, 2021), recipient of LEH Documentary of the Year 2022. Darcy is an alum of the Impact Partners Producing Fellowship and the Sundance Institute Creative Producing Fellowship, and a recipient of American Documentarys Creative Visionary Award in 2023.
"Raises urgent questions
. The genteel politeness on display at the start of the film falls away, revealing an unsettling core. How can a city move forward without acknowledging the past? Thats not just a question for Natchez, but one for America as a whole." Lovia Gyarke, The Hollywood Reporter
A tough and complex depiction of intractable racism
Thanks to the discerning eyes of Herbert and cinematographer Noah Collier, we see hypocrisy leak from the faces of their subjects, exactly as it does from the faces of the actors in Jordan Peeles GET OUT. But NATCHEZ is not a horror film. Rather, it depicts the contest between two versions of history, the stakes of which are the American present and its possible future. Amy Taubin, Film Comment
Captures the contradictions and tensions of a small Mississippi town reliant on Antebellum tourism with polyphonic complexity. Its implications broaden as its focus grows ever more specific, and in Herberts humanistic yet uncompromising direction, Natchez emerges as a microcosm of how the violent white supremacy embedded in the founding of the United States continues to infect the present. In her probing and critical, yet invariably empathetic, interrogation of this tension in the unsettled community of Natchez, Herbert has crafted a major achievement in documentary filmmaking. Robert Stinner, In Review Online