Out of a remote prison in the Philippines, New York-based photographer Lawrence Sumulong brings us images of wrenching despair, penury and bleakness. But in his collection, “Raising a Family Behind Bars”, there are also examples of unbearable lassitude and the kind of prolonged pointlessness that can only be found among people living in a place against their will. Sumulong documents families that, in the most extreme displays of desperation, have been forced by ruin to relocate from their home communities, still crumbling and broken months after Typhoon Yolanda, to live inside the walls of an island jail. There they joined relatives previously incarcerated, some enchained for petty crimes such as robbery and drug selling, others for murder and rape.
While discussing international outrageous genre films, most of the talk is about films from Europe and Asia. Often, we overlook the movies from right over the S
(William Miller) A confession given by William Miller can be used in the upcoming Rebekah Gould murder trial as ruled by Izard County Circuit Judge Tim Weaver.