SPECIAL EVENT - Project Native
Transcription
SPECIAL EVENT - Project Native
PROJECT NATIVE a l 2 016 Award-winning environmental films to educate, inspire, enrage & engage Ad mi ss i on 6th A nn u FILM FESTIVAL e Fr March 5 Tower Theaters South Hadley, MA March 12 e March 13 Mahaiwe Performing Triplex Cinema Great Barrington, MA Arts Center Great Barrington, MA LETTER FROM PROJECT NATIVE’S GENERAL MANAGER During these long winter months our minds frequently wander to arrival of spring. This is the time of year when calls and emails start pouring in about seed orders, plant availability, and site preparations. It is with a heavy heart that I inform you that Project Native will not continue its operations at the farm on North David Ellis, General Manager Plain Road. After years of financial struggles, trying to maintain an 1800’s farm house, barn, 54 acre property, full-scale nursery, and native butterfly house, our overhead expenses prevent us from becoming a financially sustainable endeavor. In light of this, the very difficult decision has been made to sell the property. The Project Native Board has accepted an offer from Helia Land Design to purchase the farm and continue operation of a native plant nursery. While our time at the farm has come to an end; it is the intent of the Board of Directors that an educational component of Project Native will continue as demonstrated by this presentation our 6th Annual Film Festival. Conversations with like-minded non-profit organizations are ongoing to explore the best options for moving forward with education programming. Over the years Project Native has been supported by your donations of time and money. Through your generosity we were able to demonstrate to thousands of visitors the value of native habitat and creating healthy diverse ecosystems. We were able to supply native plant material for small backyard gardens and hundred acre restoration projects. By sharing the incredible lifecycle of Lepidoptera on Bug & Butterfly Safaris or guided tours of our woodlands and meadow we succeeded in our mission to connect people to nature. We have enjoyed sharing the enthusiasm of our volunteers, visiting camps, school groups, customers and interns. As this chapter of Project Native comes to a close the Board of Directors and staff wish to express our deepest appreciation to the many friends of Project Native that have been a part of this journey and shared in our experience on the farm. Respectfully, A NOTE FROM FILM FESTIVAL COORDINATOR What many people don’t know is that preparations for the film festival begin six months before the lights are dimmed and the first films roll. Long before the snow flies, budgeting and fundraising begin. The winter is spent connecting with producers, attending film festivals, securing sponsors and partner organizations. Evenings and weekends are Karen Lyness LeBlanc, dedicated to previewing films with the goal of whittling Project Native’s Film over 125 films down to just two dozen. Festival Coordinator This year, twenty-five films were selected for inclusion in the festival. Many of these films have won multiple awards at some of the most prestigious festivals in the nation. The festival includes four blocks of short films; be sure to check them out. You’ll be surprised how much you can learn in under ten minutes and I guarantee that “White Earth” (an Oscar® Nominated short) will stick with you until well after the film festival closes. Films are important educational tools and we feel we can reach a larger and more diverse audience if we show the films for free. To help support future educational events, like the film festival, please consider making a donation. Thank you for joining us for Project Native’s 6th Film Festival. Please take a moment after the films to talk with the underwriting organizations in the lobby to find out how you can get involved. Education and inspiration are important, but action is necessary! Tips to ensure you have the festival experience possible. • Tickets will be available at the box office the day of the festival. • If the festival is free why do I need tickets? Great question. Tickets are issued so we have a head count and do not over fill the theater. • To guarantee admission plan to arrive 15 minutes prior to start time. If a film is sold out, a rush line will form and seats will be released 5 minutes prior to start time. • Please turn off all cell phones and electronic devices. • Theatre must be cleared between shows. All personal belongings must be removed from the theatre. Please take your trash with you. FILM FESTIVAL SCHEDULE Saturday, March 5 - Tower Theater 10:00 I Bought a Rainforest (58) 11:25 Water Water Everywhere, but...* A Dam Problem (6), Slow Season (6) , Mixing Oil & Water (11) Silent River (25), Forget Shorter Showers (12) 12:50 The True Cost (93) 2:50 Energy & Impact* 36 Inches (6), 1000 Cuts (10), White Earth (20) Dryden: The Small Town That Changed The Fracking Game (12) 4:10 This Changes Everything (90) Saturday, March 12 - Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center SPECIAL EVENT Embracing the Greatest Challenge of Our Time Featuring Joanna Macy and the Great Turning and The Wisdom to Survive: Climate Change, Capitalism and Community Followed by a panel discussion. SUnday, March 13* - Triplex Cinema * Don’t forget to change your clocks, March 13 is Daylight Savings. 10:00 10:30 11:50 1:25 3:00 5:00 7:15 Doeville (96) Gambling on Extinction (52) People & Nature* American Lawn (12), Our Daily Dose (20), Bluebird Man (30), Nature Rx (3) Overburden (66) Whistleblowers * Exposed: USDA’s Secret War on Wildlife (32), The Burden (40), The Accidental Environmentalist (12) Unbranded (105) screened with Nature Rx (3) The Important Places (10) Return of the River (70) * a collection of short films FILM DESCRIPTIONS (listed alphabetically) 1000 Cuts 10 min Filmmaker: James Balog Utah’s Canyonlands National Park is known for its fantastically formed arches and pinnacles, its canyon mazes and pristine solitude. Famed photographer and filmmaker, James Balog (Chasing Ice), finds that the rugged, primitive land that he loves is being transformed by industrial development—right up to national park boundaries. 2:50 TOWER THEATERS 36 Inches 7 min 2:50 TOWER THEATERS Filmmaker: James Parker A recovering apathetic millennial embarks on a journey of discovery to understand the economic, property rights, and environmental concerns associated with the proposed Jordan Cove Energy Project, a $7.6 billion natural gas export project through Southern Oregon. The Accidental Environmentalist 12 min Filmmaker: Kristine Stolakis John Wathen was just an average guy until coming into contact with toxic chemicals, stumbling upon a video camera, and discovering his passion for protecting the world’s waters. Watch this Alabama native’s transformation into an internationally recognized environmentalist. Winner of Spirit of Activism Award at Wild & Scenic 2016. 3:00 TRIPLEX CINEMA American Lawn 11:50 TRIPLEX CINEMA 12 min Filmmaker: Robert Sickels For a lot of people, “in lawns we trust” is more than a motto: it’s a way of life. Conversely, many folks see their lawn as an enemy. “American Lawn” is a lighthearted, surprisingly insightful, and kaleidoscopic portrait of Americans of all stripes grappling with their relationships to lawn. Bluebird Man 11:50 TRIPLEX CINEMA The Burden 3:00 TRIPLEX CINEMA 30 min Filmmaker: Neil Paprocki Al Larson was one of the first citizen scientists to take up the North American Bluebird Society’s call to action back in 1978. At 91-year-old Al has been monitoring and maintaining over 300 nestboxes for bluebirds in Idaho for 35 years. “Bluebird Man” chronicles Al’s continued efforts to conserve bluebirds throughout Southern Idaho despite his advancing age. 40 min Filmmaker: Roger Sorkin The U.S. military is currently the world’s single largest institutional consumer of oil, and the United States alone uses 20% of the total global supply. “The Burden” examines how America’s dependence on fossil fuels poses serious immediate and long-term national security threats – and how the military is taking a leading role in the battle for clean, renewable energy. Winner of Best of Festival at Wild & Scenic 2016. A Dam Problem 11:25 TOWER THEATERS Doeville 10:00 TRIPLEX CINEMA 6 min Filmmaker: Upper Deschutes Watershed Council Building successful relationships takes time but those relationships are the key to completing a successful dam removal and floodplain restoration project near Sisters, OR, that benefited farmers, fish and the surrounding ecosystem. 96 min Filmmaker: Kathryn Pasternak Doeville follows farmer Gail Rose as she struggles to keep a promise made to her late husband Alex - to keep his beloved deer farm alive - in the heart of Virginia’s beautiful Shenandoah Valley. It’s impossible to predict how Gail’s story will end, but the journey is one full of spirit, determination, humor, heartache and hard work. Dryden: The Small Town The Fracking Game 2:50 TOWER THEATERS 12 min “The industry kept saying: ‘We have the power; you have none. We are coming. Get out of the way or leave,’” says Joanne Cipolla-Dennis. When the oil and gas industry came to their town of Dryden, NY. Joanne and her neighbors came up with a plan. This is the true story of people who discovered their shared strength and turned the tables on a powerful industry. Exposed: USDA’s Secret War on Wildlife 32 min Three former federal agents and a Congressman blow the whistle on Wildlife Services—a barbaric, wasteful and misnamed agency within the USDA most Americans have never heard of—and expose the government’s secret war on wildlife on the taxpayer’s dime. 3:00 TRIPLEX CINEMA Forget Shorter Showers 12 min Filmmaker: Jordan Brown You compost, bring your own bags, eat organic, and have reduced your lawn to the size of a postage stamp. Are personal “solutions” enough to save the planet? 11:25 TOWER THEATERS Gambling on Extinction 52 min Filmmaker: Jakob Kneser This is a story about greed and a merciless battle over a limited resource: wild elephants and rhinos. Ivory and rhino horn is now a 20 billion dollar a year business, the most lucrative after drugs and weapons and has been taken over by powerful, connected, heavily armed international syndicates. Journey from the killing fields in Kenya and South Africa to the trading hubs of Vietnam and China with undercover investigators, rangers, ex-poachers, conservationists and buyers. Contains graphic images. 10:30 TRIPLEX CINEMA SPECIAL EVENT Embracing the Greatest Challenge of Our Time Saturday, March 12 at 7:00pm Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center Join us for an evening that reveals why we are fortunate to be alive in these very challenging times. The evening will include a screening of two films “Joanna Macy and the Great Turning” and “The Wisdom to Survive: Climate Change, Capitalism and Community” followed by a panel discussion with Bruce Winn, Maia Conty, Chris Landry and Quincy Saul. To create the real change necessary to heal our communities and the planet, we need the energy, creativity and enthusiasm of young people. Middle, high school and college students are encouraged to attend the festival and bring their friends. Joanna Macy & The Great Turning Filmmaker Christopher Landry in attendance. 27 minutes Joanna Macy, PhD, eco-philosopher, scholar of Buddhism, systems theory, and deep ecology shares her understanding of these times we live in, when everything we treasure seems to be at risk. A respected voice in the movements for peace, justice, and ecology, she interweaves her scholarship with five decades of activism. What is the Great Turning? It is, as Joanna describes it, the shift from the industrial growth society to a life-sustaining civilization. It is, she believes, the third major revolution of human existence, after the agricultural and industrial revolutions. This one, though, has to unfold much more quickly. The good news is that it is, all around the world. This is a thoughtful, and ultimately hopeful, film for anyone concerned about the future of life on the planet. Wisdom to Survive Climate Change, Capitalism & Community 56 minutes The Wisdom to Survive accepts the consensus of scientists that climate change has already arrived, and asks, what is keeping us from action? The film explores how unlimited growth and greed are destroying the life support system of the planet, the social fabric of the society, and the lives of billions of people. Will we have the wisdom to survive? The film features thought leaders and activists in the realms of science, economics and spirituality discussing how we can evolve and take action in the face of climate disruption. They urge us to open ourselves to the beauty that surrounds us and get to work on ensuring it thrives. PANELISTS Maia Conty is a Social Change-Agent, Evolutionary Economist, & Master LifeCoach. She is the co-creator and facilitator of Walking Our Talk, a highly active women’s circle community that is growing a local culture of trust, care and support. And she is the co-creator and a facilitator of the Generosity Economy Circle, where committed members of the local community participate in the evolutionary economic practice of gifting, generosity and community building. Chris Landry, filmmaker of “Joanna Macy and the Great Turning,” helps missiondriven organizations tell better stories through his consulting firm, Landry Communications. Chris learned how to tell effective stories during the two decades he spent in the non-profit world (including ten years of work in food security and sustainable agriculture). Quincy Saul is an organizer, musician, writer, illustrator and co-founder of Ecosocialist Horizons. His published books include “Reflections of Crisis: The Great Depression and the 21st Century” and “Maroon the Implacable: the Collected Writings of Russell Maroon Shoatz.” He is the illustrator of “The A to Z Characteristics and Qualities of Being a Revolutionary,” by Fred Ho. Bruce Winn is the co-founder of the Berkshire Environmental Action Team and a professor at Berkshire Community College. BEAT works with the public to protect the environment in the Berkshires and beyond. BEAT educates citizens about the environment and their role in protecting it, keeps the public informed of current local issues and helps people work together to take action to protect the environment. I Bought a Rainforest 58 min Filmmaker: Jacob Andrén Jacob Andrén was an ordinary kid going to school in the 1980’s who, with the help of teachers, raised money to buy a piece of forest. Now a grown up young man he is wondering about what happened to all those trees. Jacob decides to buy a plane ticket to try to find his trees and see if his efforts made a difference. Nominee for Best Conservation and Best People & Nature Program at Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival 2015 10:00 TOWER THEATERS The Important Places 7:15 TRIPLEX CINEMA 10 min Filmmaker: Forest Woodward A father and son rediscover their connection on a journey down the Colorado River through the Grand Canyon. This poignant film is a reminder that although we may sometimes go astray — stuck in eddies and in life — the path back to the important places is never too far away. Winner of a Jury Award at Wild & Scenic Film Festival. Joanna Macy & The Great Turning See center spread for more information. Mixing Oil & Water 11:25 TOWER THEATERS Filmmaker: Eric Warren Oil and gas development and fresh water use are tightly intertwined. “Mixing Oil and Water” illustrates that water quality and scarcity are becoming more prevalent in Montana where oil and gas development occurs. Are we willing to sacrifice clean water for extreme fossil fuel development? Nature Rx: Prescription Strength 11:50 & 5:00 TRIPLEX CINEMA 11 min 3 min Filmmaker: Jason Bogardus “Nature Rx” offers a timeless prescription for whatever ails you. Side effects may include confidence, authenticity, remembering you have a body, and being in a good mood for no apparent reason. Winner of Best International Short at Planet in Focus Film Festival. Our Daily Dose 20 min Filmmaker: Jeremy Seifert (GMO OMG) “Our Daily Dose” is an eye-opening look at how we have less control over our health than we may have thought. Seifert lays out the dangers of water fluoridation highlighting the most current research and interviewing doctors, activists, and attorneys close to the issue. Through thoughtful examination of old beliefs and new science, the film alerts us to the health threat present in the beverages we rely on every day. 11:50 TRIPLEX CINEMA Overburden 65 min Filmmaker: Chad A. Stevens After a mine explosion kills her brother, a procoal activist joins forces with a tree-hugging grandmother to take down the most dangerous coal company in the United States. Lorelei, fighting to stop mountaintop removal, launches a campaign to build wind farm. Betty, who lost her brother in the disaster, joins Lorelei’s fight to bring justice and economic diversity to the coalfields of Appalachia. 1:25 TRIPLEX CINEMA Return of the River 70 min Filmmakers: Jessica Plumb, John Gussman Return of the River follows a group of strongminded committed people as they attempt the impossible: to change the public opinion of a town and eventually bring a dam down. The community comes to a consensus, setting the Elwha River free and showing the way to more sustainable future. Amid grim environmental news, this is a film infused with hope. Winner of Best Conservation Message and Best Storytelling at the International Wildlife Film Festival 2015. Winner of the Marian Zunz Emerging Filmmaker Award and the Project Impact Award at 2015 Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival. 7:15 TRIPLEX CINEMA Thanks to all of our wonderful sponsors. This festival would not be possible without your support. Silent River 25 min Filmmakers: Steve Fisher, Jason Jaacks Since the passage of the NAFTA 20 years ago, U.S. companies have used the Santiago River as their own waste canal. “Silent River” follows a young woman and her family as they defy death threats to try and save one of the most polluted rivers in Mexico. Winner of Best Student Film11:25 TOWER THEATERS maker at Wild & Scenic Film Festival 2016. Slow Season 11:25 TOWER THEATERS 6 min Filmmaker: John Fiege The devastation of the 2010 BP oil spill has faded from public consciousness, but for some it cannot be escaped. “Slow Season” is a reverie on an endangered way of life through the words of a Houma Indian crab fisherman and his family, deep in Louisiana’s bayou. This Changes Everything 90 min Filmmaker: Avi Lewis Inspired by Naomi Klein’s international non-fiction bestseller This Changes Everything, the film presents seven powerful portraits of communities on the front lines, from Montana’s Powder River Basin to the Alberta Tar Sands, from the coast of South India to Beijing and beyond. Interwoven with these stories of struggle is Klein’s narration, connecting the carbon in the air with the economic system that put it there. Throughout the film, Klein builds to her most controversial and exciting idea: that we can seize the existential crisis of climate change to transform our failed economic system into something radically better. This is not a film that tries to scare the audience into action: it aims to empower. Provocative, compelling, and accessible to even the most climate-fatigued viewers, This Changes Everything will leave you refreshed and inspired, reflecting on the ties between us, the kind of lives we really want, and why the climate crisis is at the center of it all. Will this film change everything? Absolutely not. But you could, by answering its call to action. 4:15 TOWER THEATERS The True Cost 93 min Filmmaker: Andrew Morgan This is a story about the clothes we wear, the people who make them, and the impact the industry is having on our world. The price of clothing has been decreasing for decades, while the human and environmental costs have grown dramatically. The True Cost is a groundbreaking documentary film that pulls back the curtain on the untold story and asks us to consider, who really pays the price for our clothing? 12:50 TOWER THEATERS Unbranded 105 min Filmmaker: Phill Baribeau, Dennis Aig 3,000 miles, 16 wild mustangs, 4 young cowboys and countless breathtaking shots of the western landscape make this multi-award winning film a must see on the big screen. Follow the cowboys as they adopt, train, and ride a string of wild mustangs from Mexico to Canada through the wildest terrain of the American West. Unbranded is an emotionally charged odyssey that shines a bright light on the complex plight of our country’s wild horses. The trip became an epic journey of self-discovery, tested friendships, and iconic landscapes that included runaway horses, a sassy donkey, perilous mountain passes, rodeos, sickness, injury, and death. Audience Award winner at Telluride Mountainfilm and Hot Docs Film Festival. Winner of People’s Choice and Most Inspiring Adventure Film at Wild & Scenic Film Festival. Nominee for Best Theatrical at Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival. Rated PG-13 for language and unsettling images. 5:00 TRIPLEX CINEMA Plan to arrive a few minutes early to meet one of Blue Star Equiculture’s rescued working horses. White Earth 20 min Filmmaker: J. Christian Jensen Thousands of souls flock to America’s Northern Plains seeking work in the oil fields. “White Earth” is the tale of an oil boom seen through unexpected eyes. Three children and an immigrant mother brave a cruel winter and reflect on the challenges and opportunities of life in the nation’s biggest oil rush. Winner of the Student Award at the American Conservation Film Festival, Oscar®Nominee for Documentary Short Subject, and 13 more! 2:50 TOWER THEATERS Wisdom to Survive: Climate Change, Capitalism & Community See center spread for more information. 7:00 MAHAIWE PERFORMING ARTS CENTER OFFICIAL SPONSORS William Gundry Broughton Charitable Private Foundation Bobbie Hallig SUPPORTERS Native Habitat Restoration restoring balance to nature Invasive Plant Control Habitat Restoration Field Reclamation Replanting Planning & Permitting (413) 358-7400 nativehabitatrestoration.weebly.com Licensed in MA • CT • NY • VT full line natural foods store open 7 days seasonal festivals & special events visitors welcome FARM | www.hawthornevalleyfarm.org SUPPORTERS Festival Locations Tower Theaters (located in the Village Commons) 19 College Street, South Hadley, MA 01075 Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center 14 Castle Street, Great Barrington, MA 01230 Triplex Cinema 70 Railroad Street, Great Barrington, MA 01230