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Saving Jackie is a snapshot of a recovering addict’s attempt to strengthen her damaged relationship with her two estranged daughters. Jackie, single mother to Selena and Lorita, recovers from a 20-year crack cocaine addiction as her daughters transition into adulthood. Selena, the elder daughter, documents her and Lorita’s raw reconciliation process with their mother as it unfolds.
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This powerful film captures the seductiveness of doing drugs, a lure so irresistible that basic instincts to nurture and protect one's children are discarded. The film also illustrates that life is precious even when it is imperfect. Judith Harmony, Ph.D, Professor, College of Medicine, University of Cincinnati, Retired
"Saving Jackie" presents, in a refreshingly genuine, real-life fashion, the struggles toward recovery of a family stricken with crack cocaine addiction. This film highlights the recovery needs of people who grow up in families with Chemical Dependency: it will serve as an effective tool for promoting discussions about relationship dynamics in families affected by addictions. Robert Sauerland, PhD LISW-S LICDC
An intimate, insightful view of the destructive effects that drug addiction has on both individuals and families. The film shows how powerful drug addiction is, even to the extent that the addict chooses drugs over children, and where drugs overpower the natural instincts to care for one's own children. Paul Samson, PhD, Rehabilitation Counseling
Ms. Burks' success as a student and filmmaker will inspire both teens and the foster parents who care for them. The film would provide an excellent focal point for a discussion with students, teachers, and caregivers. Joanne Rentschler, Public Librarian & Collection Development Manager, Campbell County Public Library
Official Selection Sundance Film Festivial
Official Selection Palm Springs International Film Festical
Official Selection African American Film Market Place
Official Selection Cleveland International Film Festival
Official Selection Brooklyn International Film Festival
Official Selection Urbanworld Film Festival
Screened nationally on the Centric Network original show \"Black Stories\"
Selena Burks-Rentschler Selena A. Burks-Rentschler is a filmmaker with a passion for storytelling and confronting the complex issues facing urban America. Selena earned her BFA from Wright State University in 2003. With a fellowship grant from the Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University, she completed the documentary short Saving Jackie, the profound story of her mother's battle with drug addiction. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2005 and was an Official Selection at the Palm Springs International Film Festival as well as countless other film festivals nationwide. Selena was awarded an Ohio Arts Council Fellowship Grant for her work with Saving Jackie the same year.
Following the completion of Saving Jackie, Selena formed S.A. Burks Productions and has since presented her film to a variety of drug outreach programs, state and county child service organizations, and high schools and universities.
In March 2006, Selena was one of 22 artists awarded the prestigious Rockerfeller Foundation Media Arts Fellowship Grant to produce a feature focused on the dangers facing the health of adolescent girls in impoverished environments. As her next film project, Selena co-directed a documentary short entitled The True Body Project. This film follows thirteen teenage girls through a creative writing and physical fitness program, which led the girls through the process of self-discovery and challenged them to identify with their bodies from a holistic perspective. This film premiered at the Cleveland International Film Festival in 2006.
To gain additional experience working on independent feature films, Selena moved to Shreveport, Louisiana in 2008. While there, she worked on several film productions, including director Oliver Stone's biopic of former President George W. Bush, entitled W. After production on W ended, Selena moved back to Ohio to focus on developing her own feature film projects and to re-energize her child advocacy campaign. After receiving an Audience Engagement/Website Development Grant from Chicken & Egg Pictures and The Fledgling Fund, Selena launched her website, www.savingjackie.org.
Selena continues to work closely with a variety of funders as well as Working Films, a non-profit group that supports independent filmmakers by leveraging the power of storytelling through documentary film to advance struggles for social, economic, and environmental justice, human and civil rights. Selena's current motivation is to strengthen and grow her national audience through an engagement campaign that focuses on the issues raided in Saving Jackie. She is also working on the development of her first feature film.
Selena currently lives with her husband in Cincinnati, OH.
Downside Up
What happens when a poor, working-class town decides its best hope for survival is contemporary art? A personal and family story about MASS MoCA, America's largest museum of contemporary art.
Subject: Urban Studies & Environment
Power and Control
"Power and Control: Domestic Violence in America" is a comprehensive and timely exploration of the shocking persistence of domestic violence in our society.
Subject: Children, Youth & Families
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