GEORGE FLOYD: SAY THEIR NAMES
When will the "last" time be the LAST time? Chris Oledude's single "George Floyd" has now been re-presented in the powerful video, "George Floyd: Say Their Names." America's struggle for equality and fairness throughout law enforcement parallels those struggles faced by minority groups in every society where the majority feels empowered to disregard civil and human rights. The powerful protests that erupted worldwide after George Floyd's murder in May, 2020, are celebrated here. The enduring power of Black women as determined healers of a torn community is celebrated here. The victims had names. We honor their lives by saying their names.
The pressure for change must continue. No justice? No peace!
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Christopher OwensOriginal Score/Composer of Music
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Christopher OwensWriter/Lyricist
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Alyssa DannDirector
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CESO ENTERPRISES, INC.Producer
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Wendy A. WardKey Cast""Singer" "
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The Angels of Transformation DancersKey Cast
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Alyssa DannEditors
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Mathew BernardVideographer
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Project Type:Experimental, Music Video, Short, Student
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Genres:Political, Free Speech, Equality, Original Music, Music Video
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Runtime:8 minutes 7 seconds
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Film Color:Color
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First-time Filmmaker:No
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Student Project:No
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Anticentura Film FestivalBuenos Aires, CABA C1053
Argentina
Best Short Film -
Brooklyn International CinefestBrooklyn, NY
United States
Best Short -
Medusa Film Festival- 3rd seasonLos Angeles, CA
United States
Best Short -
Big Sur Film FestivalCalifornia
United States
Best Inspirational Short -
Cult Critic Movie AwardsKolkata, West Bengal
India
Best Free Speech Film -
Dream Cactherz International Film FestivalNandanpur, Komagatamaru BB. Kolkata, West Bengal
India
Best Free Speech Film -
AltFF Alternative Film FestivalToroto, Ontario
Canada
Best experimental North America -
New York Tri-State International Film FestialNew York
United States
Best Experimental Film -
Top Indie Film Awards 2021Shinkawa, Chuo-ku, Tokyo
Japan
Best Message
Director Biography - Christopher R. Owens, Alyssa Dann (Student)
During high school, Alyssa was introduced to the power of storytelling through film. She directed, filmed, and edited two of her own music videos, and fell in love with video editing. In a "Media as Service" program with Woodstock Travels, she visited India and Nepal, working with NGOs to create promotional content. After high school, she taught video editing and recording media arts to 8th Grade kids -- in her old classroom!
Alyssa's decision to direct and edit “George Floyd: Say Their Names” during her transition to college has opened her eyes and changed her life -- and she is not looking back.
Alyssa recently started attending Sarah Lawrence College (US-NY), Class of 2024, and majoring in Music, and Psychology. She is also a songwriter, and records and produces her own music.
CHRISTOPHER R. OWENS / CHRIS OLEDUDE
As a singer-songwriter and performer, Chris Owens has been musically active for nearly 55 of his 62 years. He studied piano, cello, recorder, and African drums, and also sang in numerous choruses. Owens had been in bands and school musicals, but no videos or films.
With a family to support and a career to sustain, Chris Owens put his passion for music aside until his father, Nelson Mandela and family friend Pete Seeger all passed within three months of each other between October, 2013 and January, 2014. As a result, Chris and his two brothers formed OBB - The Owens Brothers Band and started performing original music live. Then, in 2017, Chris' wife was diagnosed with cancer ... and music was again put on hold.
In 2020, a year after Sandra's death and at the start of the COVID pandemic, Chris Owens decided to create the artist known as CHRIS OLEDUDE to serve as the full outlet for his creative energy and the burning desire to speak out during challenging times. Focused on music, Owens never really thought about "videos". He really knew nothing about video production or editing.
Chris Owens founded CESO ENTERPRISES, INC. in May, 2020 to manage the work of CHRIS OLEDUDE and the intellectual property past, present and future from Chris and his two sons.
On June 14, 2020, Owens recorded the vocal tracks for the song "George Floyd". During that session, studio musicians, singers, and the recording engineer's young daughter gathered outdoors around three microphones to record the chants heard in the song. That young woman was Alyssa Dann, then a high school senior, who also served as the "voice over" towards the end of the video. Alyssa is a singer-songwriter herself and was so inspired by the song, that she asked Owens if she could work on a video for the song. And Owens consented.
The result was an inter-generational, cross-cultural, and geographically diverse urban/rural relationship. Owens had worked in local politics for a few years, including campaign management. He had overseen production of some short videotaped candidate messages for voters, but never a musical production. Dann had worked on high school video projects and her own music videos. But this video was much more complex and nearly seven minutes in length.
Between June and October, Owens' company, CESO ENTERPRISES, INC., produced the video, "George Floyd: Say Their Names," with Owens and Dann co-directing and Dann handling the editing. Owens had a small singing role, and singer Wendy Ward had the lead role, along with the community church-based Angels of Transformation Dancers.
The production was "low-budget," technically challenging, and emotionally draining. But, in the end, everyone involved with "George Floyd: Say Their Names" was moved by the experience. Now, audiences are moved as well.
Director Statement
CHRIS OLEDUDE:
The murder of George Floyd focused attention on police brutality against people of color, and racism in general, in a way that few moments have in American history. As an artist, I had to speak out in my way, right away, because I was just as angry as everyone else.
We need stability and a focus on "people first" in order to rejuvenate our nation! If you know economic justice, you will know peace. If you know health care justice, you will know peace. If you know education justice, you will know peace. If you know fair and equal justice under the law, you will know peace. If you know human and civil rights, you will know peace. And, as one of humankind's most powerful communication tools, music brings us closer to feeling these issues in our bones and saving our collective soul.
I was also blessed and honored by the strong interest of the talented Alyssa Dann in making the video. GEORGE FLOYD: SAY THEIR NAMES is a unique statement in large part because Ms. Dann brought the energy and perspectives of younger people to the project -- as well as her excellent aesthetic sense.
It is a tribute to her commitment and fortitude that Alyssa was able to complete her good work on her first 'professional' video while simultaneously starting her freshman year at Sarah Lawrence College during the COVID pandemic here in New York State. I don't know if I could have done that.
ALYSSA DANN:
When I given the opportunity to be a background vocalist for Chris Oledude song, "George Floyd," I found the experience empowering. As a fellow songwriter and visual thinker, I was inspired to create a video to accompany his Chris's song. I knew this would be uncharted territory as fresh eyes to the film making world, not having experience in social justice film, though I was deeply moved but the message.
When I asked Chris for the opportunity to do this, he gave me a strange look, but he agreed right away, and we started what would become weekly phone calls discussing intentions behind the song, protests, memorial footage, art, visuals, and revisions of our product for the message to become clear, uplifting, and effective all in one. I am so grateful that Chris had the faith and openness to create along his side.
Thank you to Film Freeway for creating spaces for messages to be shared, community to be built, and conversations to be created!
We are both so proud of the accomplishments of this video being represented and shared