The simplest thing to say about Who We Are is that it should be part of the standard curriculum in every school in America.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
The New York Times by Ben Kenigsberg
It’s a confrontational film, but never an alienating one, and so much of what’s in it is persuasive.
The Associated Press by Jocelyn Noveck
If the format of a lecture is inherently limiting, the directors do a superb job of weaving a compelling visual — and emotional — experience.
Wall Street Journal by Joe Morgenstern
What this film does best is offer, sometimes playfully and sometimes not, new perspectives on the central problem of our shared history.
RogerEbert.com by Matt Fagerholm
Robinson is matter-of-fact, thoughtful and enormously compelling in illustrating hidden chapters of our shared history.
Washington Post by Michael O'Sullivan
The combined impact of these scenes, augmented with Robinson’s lecture — which, while deeply informed and informative, is anything but dull or academic — makes for a powerful one-two punch.
Los Angeles Times by Robert Daniels
Who We Are, a revelatory, albeit stiff documentary, anchored by Robinson’s personal anecdotes and footage of his 2018 lecture at New York City’s Town Hall Theater, uncovers startling research while surveying the country’s unimaginable racial crimes.
TheWrap by Ronda Racha Penrice
Arriving at a time when conversations once reserved for academics have filtered into popular culture, “Who We Are” never plays like the product of some Hollywood bandwagon effort. Instead, its existence speaks to the power of cinema to reflect the times by sparking conversations and changing minds.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Sarah-Tai Black
While Robinson’s lecture is thought-provoking and his living tour of that same history is illuminating, the Kunstlers don’t add much in terms of directorial vision. Robinson is an apt orator and tour guide, but the literal translation of his lecture to screen lacks life and suffers from the inherent banality that comes with watching a recording of someone – no matter how charismatic – speaking to a live audience we are not part of.