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2019 Oscar Nominee, Best Documentary Feature “Minding the Gap” on POV, Monday, August 9 at 10 pm


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A Thoughtful Revelation of Family and Friends in ‘Minding the Gap’

Monday, August 9, 2021 at 10 pm

Young men use skateboarding as their lifeline

What makes a family? Minding the Gap gives us an intimate look into friendships initiated via a passion for skateboarding and cemented by shared experience. The resulting bonds are as strong as any between members of a conventional family. This captivating coming-of-age story tackles topics like domestic violence, relationships and masculinity, all while its three central subjects approach adulthood. Minding the Gap is a compelling story that is relatable across age, class and race.

Keire and Zack building the Main Street Skatepark
Keire and Zack building the Main Street Skatepark

Directed by Bing Liu, Minding the Gap airs on Monday, August 9 at 10 p.m.  The film is a co-production of ITVS, Kartemquin Films and American Documentary|POV and a co-presentation with the Center for Asian American Media (CAAM). POV is American television’s longest-running independent documentary series now in its 31st season.

A critical hit, the film has won numerous awards, including the U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Breakthrough Filmmaking at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, the Top Audience Pick: World Showcase Program at the 2018 Hot Docs Film Festival and the prize for Best First Time Director at the 2018 Critics’ Choice Documentary Awards. It is a nominee for Best Documentary at the 2019 Film Independent Spirit Awards and received seven bids for the 2019 Cinema Eye Honors, matching the record for the showcase.

This documentary chronicles the lives of the filmmaker’s friends from a small town outside Chicago. Bing artfully compiles clips from their early teens up to the present day, following each of them through every step of their lives. We see them grow into young adults, grappling with what it means to be men in present-day America.

Skateboarding is a central thread throughout the film. Accompanying the group on extensive high-speed rides, we begin to see how skateboarding is not just something to do, but a shared activity that is deeply meditative and therapeutic for each of them. Trying new tricks, encouraging each other and spending time together, they form a bond much stronger than the mere term “friend” indicates. Skateboarding is their escape.

Zack takes his son Elliot to the skatepark
Zack takes his son Elliot to the skatepark

Zack, a subject of the film and Bing’s friend, explains the power of this project: “Some people do take their negative experiences and turn them into powerful, positive things.” This film does exactly that. It gives people a space to talk openly about their experiences. And Keire, another subject and friend of Bing’s, dives into one of the main topics of the film when he says to Bing, “I get mad at skateboarding, like, a lot, but at the end of the day I love it so much that I can’t stay mad at it.”

“But it hurts you?” Bing asks. Keire responds, “Yeah, so did my dad, but I love him to death.”

Minding the Gap is a profound and cinematic exploration of what it means to become a man, all cloaked in the revelry of youth,” said Chris White, executive producer for POV. “The skateboarding footage is thrilling—sure to turn skate-skeptics into fans—and gives us an intimate way to connect with all of the young men and their stories. This is a revelatory, heartbreaking and hopeful film that opens a much-needed discussion about experiences usually kept in the shadows.”

"Minding the Gap" director Bing Liu
“Minding the Gap” director Bing Liu

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About the Filmmaker:
Bing Liu, Director/Producer/Director of Photography/Editor
Bing Liu is a Chicago-based director and cinematographer listed by Variety as one of ten documentary filmmakers to watch in 2018. His critically acclaimed documentary, Minding the Gap, has earned over 35 award recognitions since its premiere at the 2018 Sundance Film Festival, where it took home the Special Jury Award for Breakthrough Filmmaking. He directed three storylines on America To Me, a 10-hour documentary series from Steve James that examines racial inequality in the U.S. educational system, produced by Participant Media and airing on Starz. He is a member of the Directors Guild of America and was a member of the International Cinematographers Guild for seven years. A 2017 Film Independent Fellow and Garrett Scott Documentary Development Grant recipient, he graduated magna cum laude with a B.A. in Literature from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2011.

Diane Quon, Producer
Diane Quon lived in Los Angeles for more than 17 years before moving back to her hometown of Chicago. While in Los Angeles, she worked at NBC and at Paramount Pictures, where she was most recently the vice president of marketing. She is currently producing multiple documentaries with Kartemquin Films, including Minding the Gap, directed by Bing Liu; Left-Handed Pianist, co-directed by Gordon Quinn and Leslie Simmer; The Dilemma of Desire, directed by Peabody Award winner Maria Finitzo; and Finding Yingying, directed by Diverse Voices in Docs fellow Jiayan “Jenny” Shi. Quon is a 2017 and 2018 Film Independent Fellow and is currently developing a fiction film based on the New York Times best-seller Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet.

Credits:
Director: Bing Liu
Producers: Diane Quon, Bing Liu
Editors: Joshua Altman, Bing Liu
Original Music: Nathan Halpern, Chris Ruggiero
Executive Producers for POV: Justine Nagan, Chris White