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The Quilters (2024) Movie Review – The redemptive power of art
The Quilters (2024) Movie Review – The redemptive power of art

The Review Geek

time17-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Review Geek

The Quilters (2024) Movie Review – The redemptive power of art

The redemptive power of art The Quilters is a short documentary about several inmates in a quilting program housed at South Central Correctional Center, a Level 5 maximum-security prison. The men take us through the full process of their creations, which they give to foster kids. It's a heartwarming view of charming and important charity work. They spend eight hours, five days a week, in the special area where they create the quilts. You can see how that affects them in a good way, giving them a purpose. Some of them, like Fred, Chill, and Ricky, talk about their years in prison, and it's obvious how this program has changed them. It helps them develop empathy, reflects on their actions, and free themselves of their 'demons'. A few of them, like Ricky, have been there since they were young and were sentenced to life imprisonment. He entered the Center as a 20-year-old guy, and now he's in his 60's. The way he talks about remorse and losing important moments of his life is devastating. It's as if his sadness can pass right through your screen. Despite his terrible mistakes, the quilting program is his best chance at finding redemption and giving joy to other people. In a way, the documentary is also an empathy exercise for viewers, as it's necessary to see the men past their errors and as people who can change. Still, it'd be nice if it had just two or three more minutes to go deeper into why those chose the quilting program. It's easy to understand why some of them did, but it's not the focus at any point. That would contribute to showing what they expected from it at the beginning and how their mentality has changed upon joining. But the best part about the documentary is seeing photos and letters from the children thanking the gifts. A quilt might seem trivial to many people, but to them, it's a way of seeing someone still cares. And you can feel the men's raw emotions when they read the letters. It's beautiful to see their vivid smiles and how they might cry from joy at times. Sometimes, it feels like we're always being bombarded by awful and pessimistic messages. So, seeing this type of rehabilitative work also helps to restore a bit of hope in ourselves. The Quilters is proof of the redemptive and reformatory power of art, making it very impactful despite its short runtime.

Soft materials mending hardened criminals
Soft materials mending hardened criminals

RNZ News

time16-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RNZ News

Soft materials mending hardened criminals

Chill in The Quilters. Photo: Supplied / Netflix The Quilters. Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2025 Photo: Supplied / Netflix Prisoners in a level 5 maximum security prison in Missouri are the subject of a new and award-winning short documentary out on Netflix this week. The Quilters follows a group of men inside the South Central Correctional Center, where, every Monday to Friday they head to a special sewing space inside the prison and work on quilts to give to local foster care children. It's an intimate look at the men's struggles, triumphs and sense of pride in creating something beautiful while behind bars. Documentary director Jenifer McShane speaks to Susie.

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