The Bay Area Protests is a film about three periods of protest in the San Francisco Bay Area between 2009 to 2011: in 2009 the killing of Oscar Grant by a police officer Johannes Mehserle in Oakland, also in 2009 the university student protests against the 35% tuition increase as a result of the California budget crisis, and in 2011 the Oakland Commune encampment during the Occupy movement, which was much more radical in its attitude regarding police, the state and its intention to challenge capitalism. The Bay Area Protests is filmed in two very different scenarios. One film location is the Marin County Courthouse, and the other location is the imagined space of the Kaiser Convention Center, a building that the Oakland Commune tried to occupy. The Bay Area Protests imagines they did occupy the building and the same Oakland Commune occupiers act out court scenes playing roles of judge, prosecuting lawyer, defense lawyer, and witness to recount major events of three protests: Oscar Grant’s killing and the protests that erupted are discussed, arrested university students are on trial and the courts dispute events during the Oakland Commune. This is all retold through the repressive court system. The Black Panthers sought to address the needs of Black communities ravaged by the societal impacts of structural racism and their social programs influenced the Oakland Commune’s vision to address the needs of people at the camp. All three protest movements, like those of the late 1960s, were responding to a deepening social crisis and these earlier and current social movements all faced horrifying state violence and repression. The Bay Area Protests was shot in 2016, but has only been completed when an ending to the film has become possible after waves of protests that shook the world in 2020 in response to the police killing of George Floyd. The Black Lives Matter movement was central to the protests which in the U.S. involved from 15 to 26 million people. Though Black Lives Matter started in response to the killing of Trayvon Martin by white vigilante George Zimmerman, Aliza Garza, one of the co-founders of Black Lives Matter, cites Oscar Grant’s murder as helping to start the movement. The George Floyd Rebellion culminates the narrative of The Bay Area Protests as it tells a story of many movements against the systemic racist and repressive violence of the capitalist state.

2016-2022

VIDEO

VIDEO STILLS

Melanie Gilligan, The Bay Area Protests, 2016-2022, courtesy of Melanie Gilligan and Galerie Max Mayer, Düsseldorf. Still images credit: Cyrus Tabar.

CREDITS

  • Laura Michler – Laura
    Gino Rose – Gino
    Carlos Willingham – Carlos
    Stephen Wilson– Stephen

  • Laura Michler – judge, prosecuting lawyer against Johannes Meserle, defense lawyer for student protesters.
    Gino Rose – prosecuting lawyer against the Oakland Commune.
    Carlos Willingham – judge, prosecuting lawyer against student protesters.
    Stephen Wilson – judge, prosecuting lawyer against Johannes Meserle, defense lawyer for Occupy Oakland / Oakland Commune
    Marja Van Der Loo — Witness

  • Associate curator: Leila Grothe
    Script: Melanie Gilligan
    Script ideas and dialogue: Jasper Bernes
    Director: Melanie Gilligan
    Production Manager: Adriana Franco
    DP: Cyrus Tabar
    Camera Assistant: Kat Cole
    Sound recordist: Edgar Vega
    Grip: Jacob Fuller
    Camera PA: Sabia Mallory, Heather

    Thanks to Chris Chen, Ben Furstenberg and Oki Sogumi.

    Sound credits: Everyday Cinematic Sounds.