Kim Weston: Buried in Motown
Creative Chakra Film Festival Official Selecton 2026
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7m 17s
A film by Valerie Denise Jones
Kim Weston: Buried in Motown (Black Bottom to Motown)
Kim Weston: Buried in Motown is a poetic documentary short that restores the story of a Motown voice too often remembered in fragments and silence. From her early life in Detroit to her rise within Motown, the film traces Kim Weston’s journey alongside the cultural foundation of Black Bottom, where sound, community, and identity were born before they were ever recorded.
As time moves forward, the film confronts what was lost, overlooked, and left behind. Through a narration-driven approach and carefully curated archival visuals, this project does not seek to rewrite history, but to restore it with integrity, care, and intention.
Created by a female editor committed to telling powerful, culturally grounded stories, this work reflects a deeper responsibility to document, honor, and uplift narratives centered around Black women. It is both a tribute and a call to awareness, driven by urgency to ensure that voices like Kim Weston’s are not reduced to footnotes, but recognized as foundational.
Kim Weston: Buried in Motown is not just about music. It is about time, memory, and the responsibility to tell stories the right way, while there is still time to be heard.
Why This Film Matters
Kim Weston: Buried in Motown centers on a voice that helped shape an era, yet is often remembered without full context. From her early life in Detroit to her contributions within Motown, her journey is deeply connected to Black Bottom, a cultural foundation where sound, community, and identity were formed long before they were recorded.
This film does not introduce something new. It restores what has always been there.
As time moved forward, much of that foundation was overlooked or left behind. This project brings that connection back into focus, honoring Kim Weston’s voice within the broader story of place, culture, and legacy.
This film matters because it challenges how we remember. It asks audiences to look beyond what is commonly known and recognize the voices and communities that made it possible.
At its core, this is not just a story about music. It is about restoration, and ensuring that a voice like Kim Weston’s is seen, heard, and valued in its full truth.
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