Review: 'Private Violence' tackles abused woman's search for justice - Los Angeles Times
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Review:  ‘Private Violence’ tackles abused woman’s search for justice

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Cynthia Hill’s documentary “Private Violence,†about the needlessly winding road for domestic abuse justice, begins with a nail-biting scene in a shelter: a pregnant woman’s abuser is on his way there, unless she can persuade him to meet her where cops (called in advance) lie in wait.

From this thriller-ish beginning, Hill’s galvanizing film settles into legal dread as we follow the case of Deanna, presented as a North Carolina woman horrifically battered by her husband on a cross-country trip with their 2-year-old daughter. Her misery was ended by a patrolman in Oklahoma, yet the husband was not arrested.

Our tour guide for Deanna’s search for justice is Kit Gruelle, a survivor and advocate who educates future activists and trains police on how to handle domestic violence calls. (In one role-played scenario, the cops are informed afterward that they missed a telltale sign rehearsed in advance: the silencing stare from the cop playing Gruelle’s husband.)

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“Private Violence†makes painfully clear the emotional and legal hurdles battered women endure just to feel safe again in or outside the home. Brisk and disturbing, it should be an eye-opener to anyone whose understanding of domestic violence amounts to the ignorant suggestion, “Why didn’t you leave?â€

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“Private Violenceâ€

MPAA rating: None.

Running time: 1 hour, 17 minutes.

Playing: Laemmle’s Playhouse 7, Pasadena

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