Events

Punishment Park

Presented as part of the Year of Games

When:
Friday, October 10, 2025 7:00pm - 9:00pm
Where:
Logan Center Screening Room, 201
Learn more about the Year of Games
Description:

Peter Watkins’ Punishment Park was at its time a deeply divisive, urgent work of speculative fiction, set in an alternate timeline in which the 1950 McCarran Act has been invoked to quell the civil unrest of the late-1960s. It is a dystopian vision of Nixon’s America that eerily mirrors our current political moment, replete with made-for-TV tribunals, alliterative detention camps, invocation of obscure presidential powers, and National Guardsmen rounding up dissidents and others deemed to be “a risk to internal security.” To avoid outrageously long prison sentences, those detained by federal forces can elect to play a grueling game of capture-the-flag across fifty-three miles of California desert in Punishment Park. If participants can avoid apprehension and make it to the American flag within three days, they will be set free—at least according to the rules of the game. Of the many speculative left turns the film makes to arrive at its gruesome conclusion, perhaps the least believable today is the idea that the US government would allow the BBC documentary crew access to the camp at all. Screening from Watkins’ personal 35mm print. (Peter Watkins, USA, 1971, 91 minutes, 35mm)

This event is free and open to the public. Doors open thirty minutes prior to showtime. Presented as part of the Year of Games, with support from the Pozen Family Center for Human Rights.