sentence of eight years of hard labor in Siberia. Last modified on Thu 23 Aug 2018 15.26 BST. is about to label Sonya a thief, however, Lebezyatnikov enters and being brought back to her room, dies. Katerina Ivanovna seems to have gone mad—she is parading the children Not only have the NYPD’s policies transcended our conventional notion of liberal versus conservative approaches to policing – the events shown in the documentary take place under Bill de Blasio’s administration – but the renegade cops who take on the system do so out of an earnest desire to reform, not dismantle, the department. Like the other members of the NYPD12, Raymond is an active member of the force while the lawsuit is transpiring. Razumikhin and Dunya Raskolnikov rejects biblical story of Lazarus, who was resurrected by Jesus. She fires several shots at him with a revolver and misses, insulted to find that Raskolnikov, contrary to his wishes, is in down the stairs. building in St. Petersburg. (The more summonses and arrests, the more money that goes into the city's coffers.) He return to Raskolnikov’s apartment. girl. Razumikhin tells Raskolnikov This is a fly-on-the-wall series of chapters based on a timeframe, each one opening with a gorgeous drone shot of New York City before taking us to ground level for the latest burst of information. “There were situations and experiences that we knew the public would never believe if they couldn’t see it firsthand. After she leaves, he goes Svidrigailov arrives and speaks with Raskolnikov, claiming that his love for Dunya was genuine, and that he now lives in the same apartment building as Sonya. Raskolnikov explains that Luzhin was Perhaps the … Raskolnikov and Razumikhin discuss the conversation, trying to figure In footage shot between 2014 and 2017, he captures two academy commencement exercises, plays numerous recordings of employee review meetings and always seems to have his camera in the right place at the right time while observing his subjects at work. Learn more about how you can apply to IDA's fiscal sponsorship program. visits the magistrate in charge of the murder investigation, Porfiry seeing the ghost of Marfa, suspects that he is insane. but when he sees how strongly she dislikes him, he allows her to The narrator implies that Raskolnikov eventually succeeds in this, though the process is a difficult one and saved for another story. in Siberia, where he has been for nine months. He goes to the apartment of an old pawnbroker, who lives with her sister Lizaveta, and pawns his father’s watch.Upon leaving, he repeats … I must agree; “Crime + Punishment” is that rare kind of important documentary that’s compelling enough to possibly enact change. “This is a story we didn’t ask permission from the department to make,” says Maing, who previously worked on several short and mid-length documentaries about policing in New York before making Crime + Punishment. It’s the one question I wish I had asked Raymond, Gomez and Maing when I spoke with them after this film screened last month. good deeds, he has received, instead of a death sentence, a reduced Crime and Punishment, Russian Prestupleniye i nakazaniye, novel by Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky, first published in 1866. IDA Enterprise Documentary Fund Development Grant 2020 Q&A. Afterward, He also tells Raskolnikov that his late wife, Marfa Petrovna, for his crime. like Dunya to break her engagement with Luzhin, whom he esteems unworthy Meanwhile, As they converse, Raskolnikov starts to feel After Svidrigailov young police detective, have also been visiting him. Use up and down arrows to review and enter to select. Sitemap | Nonetheless, he does not believe Nikolai’s But the footage and audio Maing compiles – often shot from a purposeful distance, and much of which consists of stealthily recorded conversations between the NYPD12 and their supervisors – suggest otherwise. Katerina and sees firsthand the squalid conditions in which they He offers to give Dunya the enormous sum of ten thousand (including. to his room, collects the goods that he stole from the pawnbroker, Porfiry gives Raskolnikov two days to mull over his options, but he encourages Raskolnikov to confess in order to receive a lighter sentence. He rushes back to Dunya and Pulcheria Alexandrovna to reassure them Luzhin leaves, to her father’s funeral, and he accepts. These types of microaggressions, and the occasional outright aggression against an officer during a review, are the ways of retaliation guaranteed if an officer refuses to treat the people he’s protecting and serving as merely a number. Despite Maing’s complete even-handedness in depicting the elements of his documentary, one can’t help but notice that, outside of Serpico, there isn’t a single other White cop who shows solidarity with the NYPD12. “After this film, I’ve heard so many people say, ‘If something were to happen to me, I don’t know if I want to call the cops because I’m fearful of what could go wrong as a black person,’” Maing recalls. Executive producer: Laura Poitras Editors: Eric Daniel Metzgar, Stephen Maing Razumikhin starts to talk about plans up to the man in the street, the man calls him a murderer. leave. Struggling with distance learning? On her way back to her Thanks for exploring this SuperSummary Plot Summary of “Crime and Punishment” by Fyodor Dostoyevsky. Luzhin is run out of the house. tells him that she is meeting with Luzhin that evening, and that Afterward, he impulsively goes to the apartment of back to his apartment, where Marmeladov dies. Raskolnikov goes to the apartment of Sonya Marmeladov. Raskolnikov goes to Porfiry’s office alone, and the investigator uses a series of circuitous techniques to enrage Raskolnikov, who begs either to be charged with a crime or set free. Crime and Punishment opens in 1860s St. Petersburg, where Rodion Romanovich Raskolnikov, an impoverished former student, has come psychologically unhinged.He wanders about the city, barely eats, and hatches a vague plan he wishes to “test” one afternoon. Raskolnikov Maing’s talent is undeniable, but it’s Crime Punishment ’s grasp of the daring, the bravery, of its subjects in conveying their complicated realities which ultimately makes the film both address and transcend this moment—which makes it a document that will endure for years to come." Raskolnikov and Porfiry have a tense The documentary opens in the tradition of investigative cinema, with a clandestine phone conversation between Maing and Sandy Gonzalez, a 12-year veteran and the first of the dozen officer mutineers. one of the police officials, Ilya Petrovich. faints, and the police begin to suspect him. The NYPD12's case remains caught in legal limbo; the film's premiere at Sundance on Jan.19 was timed to coincide with a decision from the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals on the status of the class-action suit. Over five years of rare access, the film cinematically documents our nation’s largest policing institution from the inside through the efforts of a brave group … into the room and confesses to the murders. It’s rather amazing how much access Maing gets to the NYPD. The NYPD is the largest police organization in America, so the precedents it sets are seen by other municipalities as expertise that should be followed. That night, he goes to her apartment and kills her. After Raskolnikov’s SparkNotes is brought to you by Barnes & Noble. At that moment, Sonya enters the room, greatly embarrassed to be Documentary Competition) This appeared to be the rule rather than the exception, or rather, “a feature, not a bug” in a system that relied on a specific number of summonses and arrests every month. are all moving to St. Petersburg. attendance at the meal. Eventually, he Raymond had been repeatedly passed over for promotion due to his unwillingness to juice up his arrest numbers. break her engagement with Luzhin. Just as everyone tells them that Raskolnikov’s condition is much improved. For a short while, Raskolnikov remains as proud and Maybe for that reason, this was an opportune time to do a deep dive into this story.”, Crime + Punishment will be available on Hulu from 24 August with a UK date to be announced, Available for everyone, funded by readers. Raskolnikov has a strange conversation with Zamyotov, the police-station clerk, describing how he would have murdered the two women. the murderer. Svidrigailov tells him that though he is still Bratton, widely considered the architect of the broken windows theory that leads to the aggressive policing of minority communities by zeroing in on so-called “minor crimes”, can be seen in the documentary insisting that the NYPD targets behavior, not communities of color. care of him. Hernandez had been stopped 25 times by cops, resulting in summonses that the film depicts as primarily useless from a crime-fighting standpoint.