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Film Library

Karen Walldorf

How to Sue the Klan

How to Sue the Klan is the story of how five Black women from Chattanooga used legal ingenuity to take on the Ku Klux Klan in a historic 1982 civil case, fighting to hold them accountable for their crimes and bring justice to their community.

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Karen Walldorf

Hangman

A recently widowed woman works through the complexities of grief with the help of friends, strangers, and Tupperware.

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Karen Walldorf

Generational Curses

After years of estrangement, incarceration, and broken promises, how does one high schooler employ documentary storytelling and art of filmmaking to carry her family into spaces that can heal and reconcile?

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Karen Walldorf

Fragments of a Life Loved

This film reconstructs the life of a woman, the director, based solely on interviews of the people who loved her. Intimate first-hand accounts, mixed with old mementos, will reveal the universal path of love.

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Karen Walldorf

Fire Tower

Gazing from one hundred feet above the forest, FIRE TOWER draws us into the lookouts’ world and invites us to contemplate how solitude can inspire a different connection with nature, community and our creativity.

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Karen Walldorf

Counted Out

In the 21st century, our world is dominated by technology, data, and algorithms, yet we maintain the persistent myth that not everyone is a “math person.” Can changing our minds about math revolutionize who has power–and who is counted out?

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