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Nine years in the making, Seeds is Brittany Shyne’s lyrical, award-winning documentary debut, offering a quietly powerful portrait of Black generational farmers in the American South. Filmed in black-and-white, the documentary captures the daily lives, labor, and enduring traditions of families determined to maintain their land and legacy despite systemic inequities. Through the patient rhythms of the farm, viewers witness a community rooted in resilience, heritage, and deep connections to the land.At the heart of the film are Willie Head Jr., his grandchildren, and other multi-generational farmers. Head recounts that in 1910 Black families owned 16 million acres; today, only 1.5 million remain. Beyond personal stories, Seeds highlights environmental and agricultural issues: the careful stewardship of soil, crops, and livestock, sustainable farming practices passed down through generations, and the ecological knowledge embedded in land management. These farmers’ work preserves not only cultural history but also living, productive ecosystems, underscoring the intertwined fates of people and environment.Shyne’s cinematography evokes the timeless beauty of rural landscapes, from cotton harvests to controlled burns, while her understated vérité style lets the farmers’ expertise and commitment speak for itself. The film captures intimate moments, tending livestock, caring for children, harvesting crops that reveal the profound environmental and social knowledge these communities sustain.Awarded the U.S. Documentary Grand Jury Prize at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival, Seeds is both a meditation on survival and a tribute to the enduring human and ecological wisdom of Black farmers. It is a film that quietly sows empathy, awareness, and respect, connecting audiences to the urgent issues of land, legacy, and environmental stewardship.Nicole Guillemet