Taylor's Wall

Taylor's Wall is a 2001 television film directed by Craig Ross Jr., written by Cheryl McKay and starring Sam Doumit and Lukas Behnken.

Taylor's Wall
Directed byCraig Ross Jr.
Produced byDawn Karen
Written byCheryl McKay
StarringSam Doumit
Lukas Behnken
Marlon Young
Jayne Taini
Dublin James
Jeremy Ray Valdez
Karan Ashley
Distributed byFamily Theater Productions
Release date
  • 2001 (2001)
Running time
28 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot

A teenage girl, whose brother was the second victim of two shootings on her campus, starts painting the wall in an attempt to end such school violence. The wall also becomes a point of healing and unity for the students as other students, friends of both the shooters and the victims, start helping Taylor paint the wall. A girl's despair...a teacher's challenge. Taylor wonders why her brother had to die. Her world no longer makes sense. Rebelling against the system, she is nearly suspended from school. A charismatic substitute teacher is her only hope. The teacher and his students share powerful journal entries and Taylor decides she can make a difference by finding a creative outlet for her pain. Taylor's brother, before his death, and eventually Taylor herself work to provide a solution to the root causes of random violence and other crimes committed by teens.

Cast

ActorRole
Sam Doumit Taylor Manning
Lukas Behnken Kyle Manning
Marlon Young Mr. Dubois
Jayne Taini Principal Gates
Dublin James Drew
Jeremy Ray Valdez Arturo
Karan Ashley Jade
gollark: That seems like more of an argument against political instability and dividing up long-lived political union things than against not having communism.
gollark: I have to admit I do like the "concrete and large things of glass" aesthetic, although generally it could use more colors.
gollark: If doing nothing creates more evil than some sort of complex evil-creation system, then a good evil maximizer would decide to switch to doing nothing, if it was made aware of this.
gollark: Probably less bad stuff, though, than an organization which is actively trying to do bad stuff and is somewhat good at it.
gollark: Competent evil is going to do lots of evil things. Not-very-competent not-evil is not going to do many things, but at least it won't do many evil things.
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