The film opens with Parks featured on the quiz show “To Tell the Truth,” where the celebrity panelists struggle to identify her, making vaguely condescending assumptions about her quiet dignity.

Yet as Parks’ great nephew, Lonnie McCauley, notes, Parks was hardly an idle bystander in the movement but rather “a soldier from birth” – points reinforced by both interviews with her and portions of her writing as read by LisaGay Hamilton.

“I’ve never gotten used to being a public person,” Parks says while noting that in all her talks with reporters through the years regarding the act of silent defiance that launched the Montgomery bus boycott in 1955 – refusing to go to the back of the bus to give her seat to a White patron – she “never told anyone” it was because her feet were tired.

Like “Descendant,” directors Yoruba Richen and Johanna Hamilton connect Parks’ story directly to the present, as historians note that the statue commemorating her that sits in the Capitol was dedicated in 2013, the same year the Supreme Court invalidated key parts of the Voting Rights Act, a signature accomplishment of the activism that Parks championed.

Perhaps foremost, “Mrs. Rosa Parks” highlights the selflessness of its subject and seeks to provide a detailed portrait of a woman who, through the vagaries of history, was frequently reduced to a symbol. “She didn’t want the awards. She didn’t want the money. She didn’t want the fame,” McCauley states.

Parks, rather, wanted – indeed devoted her life to fighting for – justice and equality. And as these two projects make clear, the struggle for that continues.

“Descendant” premieres October 21 in select theaters and on Netflix.

“The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks” premieres October 19 on Peacock.