NPR

To Answer Hollywood's Diversity Problem, California Program Hands Kids The Camera

This weekend, Youth Cinema Project students screened their films for the public. The program aims to create a pipeline to get kids of color in underachieving schools into the filmmaking industry.
Leonissa Duarte, 18, left, and Freddy Tijerino, 18, star in director Anali Cabrera's film<em> Luna at Moonlight</em>, set at the Moonlight Rollerway in Glendale, CA.

At Union Avenue Elementary School in Los Angeles, a classroom of fifth grade students are buzzing during the last week of school.

The students are high-fiving, grabbing popcorn and forming a circle around a makeshift stage.

One of those students is Dylan Martinez — he's here to celebrate a movie he made.

"My film is about a scared plumber," Martinez says. "We pretty much put all the scripts together, all the screens together, went to the places where we filmed our scenes, and we edited, put music, looked for music, and that's it!"

Martinez and his classmates are part of the Youth Cinema Project,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from NPR

NPR2 min read
Iran Hails Attack On Israel As A 'Victory'; Photos Of Sudan, 1 Year Into A Brutal War
Iran says its attack against Israel was a success, despite the fact that 99% of the drones were intercepted. A Sudanese photographer documents how war has upended life in his country.
NPR2 min readInternational Relations
Photos: A Year Of War In Sudan
A year of war has torn through Sudan, causing devastation and more than 8 million people to be displaced.
NPR4 min read
Finally! Tough New Safety Rules On Silica Dust Are Out To Protect Miners' Lungs
Addressing a problem first identified 50 years ago, federal regulators say stricter new rules to limit miners' exposure to silica dust are expected to finally go on the books on Tuesday.

Related