| |
2004
Festival Schedule
| 7:00
pm – 9:00 pm
OISE
Auditorium
252
Bloor Street West |
Dr.
Helen Caldicott
Envisioning Peace & Security |
| 7:00
pm – 9:00 pm
The
Royal Cinema
608
College Street |
Mini
Cine Tupy
Sin
Embargo |
| 9:00
pm - 12:00 am |
| 7:00
pm – 9:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Children
of the Storm |
| 9:00
pm – 11:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
At
the First Breath of Wind |
| 7:00
pm – 9:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Being
Caribou |
| 9:00
pm – 11:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Dans
le jardin du Monde |
| 9:30
am – 11:30 am
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Vultures:
The Flying Dustbins |
| 2:30
pm – 4:30 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Summer
of Discovery
Yuri
Vella's World |
| 4:30
pm – 6:30 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Re-creating
Eden
Seeds
of Change |
| 7:00
pm – 9:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Waste
Land |
| 9:00
pm – 11:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Still,
the Children are Here |
| 9:00
am – 1:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
|
| 10:00
am – 4:30 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
| 11:00
am – 1:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Termites
The
Great Ball Game
A
Day with the Earth
Chris
McKhool's Earth, Seas and Air Concert |
| 11:00
am – 1:00 pm
Bissell
Room, 130 St. George St. |
The
End of Suburbia: Oil Depletion and the Collapse of the American
Dream |
| 11:00
am – 1:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
In
God's Own Country
Alternative
Agriculture: Food for Life |
| 11:00
am – 1:00 pm
Al
Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Av |
The
Future is Wild - Ice World |
| 2:00
pm – 4:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Termites
Cockroach
Cocktail |
| 2:00
pm – 4:00 pm
Bissell
Room, 130 St. George St. |
Wake
Up Call
Wildlife
Warriors - Allies of Nature |
| 2:00
pm – 4:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Vultures: The
Flying Dustbins |
2:00
pm - 4:00 pm
Al Green Theatre,
750 Spadina Av |
Thirst |
| 4:30
pm – 6:30 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
The
Meatrix
Animals |
| 4:30
pm – 6:30 pm
Bissell
Room, 130 St. George St. |
The
Woman and the Sea
Jus'
Call me Tjarra |
| 4:30
pm – 6:30 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Air
Pollution
Melody...out
of tune
Miles
to Go |
4:30
pm – 6:30 pm
Al Green Theatre,
750 Spadina Av |
Under the Surface |
| 7:00
pm – 9:00 pm
Al
Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue |
Wake
up Call
Helen's
War: Portrait of a Dissident |
| 7:00
pm – 9:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Inheritance:
A Fisherman's Story |
| 9:00
pm – 11:00 pm
Al
Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue |
One of Many |
| 9:00
pm – 11:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Call
to the Dark Side
Here
Indigestion
The Architect
Transit
Oil Wells: Sturgeon Road and 9th Street
If you Lived here you'd be home by now
Come Alive
Lightyear
Ocean Chronicles
Precious Little Tiny Love
Tangly Wood
One Stop Shopping
Waiting for the Ice to Melt
Two by Two
Apnea |
| 9:00
am – 10:00 am
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
| 11:00
am – 5:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
| 11:00
am – 1:00 pm
Bissell
Room, 130 St. George St. |
The
Red Pill
Think
Twice
Suzuki
Speaks |
| 11:00
am – 1:00 pm
Al
Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue |
The
Water Thieves
The
Never, Never Water |
| 11:00
am – 1:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Mining? No Thanks!
One Month in Tambogrande |
| 11:00
am – 1:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
|
1:00
pm - 4:30 pm
Innis College, 2
Sussex Avenue |
| 1:00
pm - 2:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
| 2
:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Bissell
Room, 130 St. George St. |
Youth,
Camera, Action Videos
Gulf
Islands Film & Television School - Youth Videos |
| 2
:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Al
Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue |
Walking
with Ghosts
A
Wild Dog's Story |
| 2
:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
New Eldorado |
| 4:30
pm - 6:30 pm
Bissell
Room, 130 St. George St. |
Bastards |
| 4:30
pm - 6:30 pm
Al
Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue |
Save
Nature
Uts'am/Witness
Oona
River |
| 4:30
pm - 6:30 pm
Innis
College, 2 Sussex Avenue |
Turn
to the Wind
The
Venus Theory |
| 7
:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Al
Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue |
Lustre |
| 9
:00 pm - 11:00 pm
Al
Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue |
For decades, Dr. Helen
Caldicott has been one of the most passionate advocates for nuclear
disarmament and world peace. She founded and headed Physicians for
Social Responsibility and Women's Action for Nuclear Disarmament.
She is a Nobel Peace Prize nominee, and winner of numerous awards
including the Gandhi Peace Prize. Planet in Focus is pleased to
present Dr. Caldicott and her message of peace, education and empowerment.
Tuesday
September 28, 2004, 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Venue:
The Royal Cinema, 608 College Street
Opening Night Gala - $15
Mini
Cine Tupy, Sergio Bloch, Brazil, Documentary, 10 min, Portuguese
with subtitles, 2002
Canadian Premiere
Welcome
to the Mini Cine Tupy, a movie theatre on the outskirts of Sao Paolo
made from ‘trash.’ Meet the proprietor of the establishment,
a charming trash gatherer whose love of the cinema inspired to collect
materials found in the garbage and show matinees for the kids in
the neighbourhood. The cinema opens every Sunday and the screening
starts as soon as it gets dark, unless it rains. Tickets are free,
and the popcorn is delicious.
&
Sin
Embargo: Never the Less, Judith Grey, US, Documentary, 49 min,
Spanish with subtitles
Canadian Premiere
After
the revolution of 1959 and the U.S. embargo that followed, the people
of Cuba were left to fend for themselves. Deprived of even the most
basic goods, they scavenge the alleys and scrap heaps, giving new
vitality to the discarded. Their recycled products are often remarkably
ingenious and creative. For Andres the sculptor, Tomas the canary
breeder, and the other subjects of Sin Embargo, even the greatest
pressure – whether levied by government or circumstance –
cannot crush the spirit nor quash the desire to forge a better life
for themselves and their families. Shot entirely in Cuba, Sin Embargo
is a look into the hearts and dreams of struggling peoples and a
tribute to their optimistic and resourceful determination to survive.
Tuesday
September 28, 2004, 9:00 pm - 12:00 am
Venue:
TBD
Join us
for a sizzling party to celebrate the kick-off of the fifth anniversary
of Canada's international environmental film festival.
Wednesday
September 29, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Children
of the Storm, Stig Holmqvist, Sweden, Documentary, 91 min,
English and some subtitles, 2001
Canadian Premiere
Six teenagers
from different parts of the world were the characters of a documentary
series made by Swedish filmmaker Stig Holmqvist in the 1970's. Adawi
who lived in the rainforests of Papua New Guinea, Naoto in a suburb
of Tokyo, Sahra in a refugee camp in Somalia, Soroji on the savannah
in Tanzania, Sheila in Belfast, and Eusebio on a sugar plantation
in Guatemala. Over the years Holmqvist tried to keep in touch with
them but gradually lost contact. Now, twenty-five years later he
goes looking for them. Each of them has a very personal story to
tell, and through them the film mirrors the state of the world.
Winner
of the Critics Award for Documentary film at the 2003 Cinema &
History Festival in Istanbul.
Co-sponsored
by: Amnesty International Toronto Organization
Wednesday
September 29, 9:00 pm – 11:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Canadian Premiere
At
the First Breath of Wind, Franco Piavoli , Italy, Drama, 90
min, Italy, Italian with subtitles, 2002
At
the First Breath of Wind is the cinematic complement to the
slow food movement, both birthed in Italy. The stillness of summer
is savoured in this study of a rural bourgeois family. Invoking
a profound sense of place, relationship to land, affairs of race
and class, and interactions between art and science, Piavoli draws
his audience into an existential reflection on life itself. What
is remarkable is that the filmmaker provides that rare element in
modern cinema - quiet space for the viewer to not only enter and
participate in the world of the film, but to also explore the foundations
of one’s own existence. Spectacular cinematography showcases
the subtle insertion of nature motifs in every frame. A deceptively
simple film that lingers in the soul. Screened at Sundance 2003.
Thursday
September 30, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Being
Caribou, Leanne Allison & Diana Wilson , Canada, Documentary,
70 min, 2004
Newlyweds
Karsten Heuer and Leanne Allison set out from the remote village
of Old Crow in the Yukon to follow the annual migration of the porcupine
caribou herd. The young couple’s plan is to accompany the
caribou on a 1500 kilometre journey across three mountain ranges
from their wintering range to the spring calving grounds, and back
again, on foot!
Thursday
September 30, 9:00 pm – 11:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
World Premiere
Dans le Jardin du Monde, Maya Rosa, France, Documentary,
64 min, Portugues with subtitles, 2004
On
the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Salazar dictatorship in
Portugal, people in the southern agricultural region of the country
recount their experiences before and after the agrarian revolution.
Now, the fruits of the revolution – democracy, farming co-operatives,
labour unions, employment benefits programmes, and communal land
ownership – are being slowing eaten away. Poetry, humour,
first person narratives, picturesque cinematography, and languid
pacing elevate this film to into an elegant ode to the spirit of
rural labourers. Warning: scenes of animal slaughter.
Friday
October 1, 9:30 am - 11:30 am
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Vultures – The Flying Dustbins, Paul Reddish, Austria,
Documentary, 52 min, English, 2001
Vultures
may be the Cinderella species of the bird world. Although given
a bad rap because they are considered ugly they are actually quite
critical to their ecosystems. They are clever creatures who use
stones as tools, spy on each other, and communicate about the best
locations for fresh food. With side-splitting animated segments,
tongue-in-cheek narration, and innovative aerial footage this documentary
may turn you into a vulture lover, almost.
Special
guest appearance of Baldwin, a Turkey Vulture, and Earth Ranger
Chris Hakes.
Friday
October 1, 2:30 pm – 4:30 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Summer
of Discovery, Sam Goodwin, Canada, Documentary, 48 min, English,
2003
A 550
year old man is found in the ice, along with tools, and evidence
that great caribou herds once stretched across the southwest Yukon.
So begins this detective story in which the detectives are not only
scientists and journalists, but native youth and elders as well.
For the Aboriginal peoples of the North what to do with the discoveries
is perhaps more important than the artifacts that were found. Instead
of conflicting, modern science and ancient traditions compliment
each other in a documentary that gradually seduces the viewer.
&
Yuri Vella’s World, Liivo Niglas, Estonia,
Documentary, 58 min, Estonian, Khanti and Russian with subtitles,
2003
Canadian Premiere
Yuri
Vella, a writer and social activist of the Forest Nenets living
in western Siberia, left his home village ten years ago to lead
the life of a reindeer herder in the taiga. The little unique world
he created there was meant to offer insulation from the social degeneration
caused by alcoholism and unemployment among the indigenous peoples
of Siberia. In a film that is as unpretentious as Yuri himself,
we experience the oasis he has created among the derricks of the
largest oil-producing regions of Russia. The film won the IUCN Award
for the Environment at the 2003 Visions du Réel Festival
in Gland, Switzerland.
Friday
October 1, 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Re-Creating
Eden, Dir: Barry Lank/ Prod: Merit Jensen
Carr, Canada, Documentary, 22 min, 2003
"I
want community gardens to be as common in big cities as libraries,"
says Laura Berman of the Food Share Garden program in Toronto. Formerly
a landscape architect, Laura now devotes her life to coordinating
garden projects and believes that gardens play an invaluable role
in city life, providing food, recreation and a foundation for building
community.
&
Seeds
of Change, Thirza Jones, Canada, Documentary, 48 min, 2003
“Plants
and soil are alive, like us” a Costa Rican organic farmer
tells a Canadian counterpart who has traveled to his country to
find potential solutions for the loss of family farms across the
Prairies. In a unique cultural and technical exchange, 12 Canadian
farmers bring home the seeds of a green revolution, and when the
‘Ticos’ visit Canada they take back dreams of technologies
that could ease their labours. An engaging film that provides practical
information for everyone who wants to grow their own food.
Friday
October 1, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Canadian Premiere
Waste
Land, Jens Schanze, Germany, Documentary, 63 min, German with
subtitles, 2001
Over the
next 40 years, twelve thousand people in the Rhineland brown coal
area will be re-located to allow open-cast mining. They are given
no choice, and while some are resigned to the impending dislocation
others are determined to stay put. Stunningly photographed in black
and white, Waste Land observes the citizens of three villages in
their old homes over the course of a year. They are movingly articulate
about what they expect to experience in their new locations where
developers make all the rules.
Friday
October 1, 9:00 pm – 11:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Canadian Premiere
Still,
the Children are Here, Dinaz Stafford, US, Documentary, 84
min, Garo with subtitles, 2003
For some
indigenous peoples, cultivating rice is a way of life and worship.
In the west Garo Hills of north-eastern India, villagers still grow
ancient and diverse strains of hill rice in the same way that their
ancestors did six thousand years ago. Still, the Children are Here
is an illustration of the magic that can happen when the filmmaker
gets out of the way and allows people to tell their own story. Instead
of having the dialogue simultaneously translated for her during
shooting, Stafford chose to just observe what the Garo did and said
before the camera, and has created a beautiful document of their
lives.
Saturday
October 2, 9:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Courtyard at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
$5
in advance or $6 at the door
A delicious organic pancake breakfast made with locally grown ingredients
provided by environmentally-conscious producers. Start our festival
day at this all-ages event and then take in your choice of a screening
and concert for children, or screenings for youth or adults.
Saturday
October 2 - 10:00 am – 4:30 pm
Sunday October 3 - 1:00 pm - 4:30 pm
Venue: Courtyard at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Like
an old fashioned town square – where friends and strangers
meet, ideas and information are exchanged, healthy products and
produce are offered for sampling – the Eco Fair is an exciting
and interactive forum where you will be inspired, entertained and
informed. A diverse range of environmentally-conscious businesses,
government agencies, non-govermental organizations, and vendor,
offer simple and effective ways to improve your life and the world
around you.
Saturday
October 2, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Room 222 at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Termites,
Nick Hilligoss, Australia, Animation, 5 min, English, 2003
Canadian
Premiere
While
Eco, the Pest Controller, is out ridding the world of pests the
natural way, a nest of termites are literally eating him out of
house and home. This calls for the expert termite eater, the Echnida,
and not a moment too soon. Hilarious animation that will have young
and old cheering and rolling on the floor.
&
The
Great Ball Game, Andrew Horne, Canada, Animation, 6 min, English,
2003
For generations
the Muskogee First Nations have passed down a tale that reminds
us that what makes each of us unique can often be used to great
advantage. Now this delightful story comes alive through textural
cut-out style animation. Once an outcast, Bat comes through in the
great ball game between the creatures with teeth and those with
wings.
&
A
Day with the Earth, Urabe Ginshiro & Nakamura Daisuke,
Japan, Animation, 15 min, 2002
A little
boy discovers that humans have a lot in common with animals –
from our bodily functions to the ways we move. Children will enjoy
the irreverence of this frank and fanciful look at the connection
between all the creatures that live on this planet.
&
Chris
McKhool’s Earth, Seas and Air Concert
The film screenings lead into a fun and interactive eco-concert
featuring children’s entertainer Chris McKhool who is back
by popular demand. He gets children and families dancing and singing
songs from his appearances on Mr. Dressup, YTV and the CBC. Kids
join Chris on stage to play simple musical instruments he has gathered
from around the world! This interactive eco-concert features Chris
on guitar and violin performing folk, pop, wordbeat, rap and jazz.
100% fun!
Saturday
October 2, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Bissell Room at Robarts Library, 130 St. George St.
The End of Suburbia: Oil Depletion and the Collapse of the American
Dream, Gregory Greene, Canada, Documentary, 78 min, English,
2004
As Canada
drifts towards American levels of consumption, patterns of urban
planning, and resulting crises of sustainability, The End of
Suburbia is a timely cautionary tale. With global demand for
fossil fuels soon to outstrip supply some environmentalists are
pushing for the development of alternative energy sources, but that
may not be enough. A comprehensive and challenging film, The
End of Suburbia, attacks the problems with brutal honestly
and offers some directions for salvation.
Saturday
October 2, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
In God’s Own Country,
Nina Subramani & Rajani Mani, India, Documentary, 28 min, English,
2002
Canadian
Premiere
Children
run out of their classrooms to look at planes flying above. The
planes are spraying the cashew fields of Kerala with a deadly pesticide
- Endosulfan. The local doctor and school principal notice increased
cancer levels, birth defects and other health effects. Laboratory
tests reveal that almost everything is contaminated – from
the water, to the vegetables, to human blood. So begins the community's
battle for its right to pure air and water. A haunting portrait
of the hidden human costs of the cheap foods we eat.
&
Alternative Agriculture: Food for Life, Ray Burley, Canada,
Documentary, 46 min, English, 2004
The growing
demand for natural, organic foods is creating an agricultural revolution.
Increasingly, consumers are looking for food produced without the
use of chemicals, pesticides, hormones or antibiotics. Animals,
grains, fruits and vegetables are raised to thrive in a natural
environment – the antithesis of factory farming. Even though
organic food is more expensive to produce, shoppers are willing
to pay the added cost. They believe that by buying factory food,
they are supporting a socially and environmentally destructive form
of agriculture. A film about common sense and hope.
Saturday
October 2 – 11:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
The Future is Wild – Ice World, Paul Reddish, US,
Documentary/Animation, 49 min, 2002
Canadian Premiere
What would
the world look like in the future if humanity ceased to exist? Enter
the science-fiction vision of a group of scientists who use their
knowledge of geology and biology to construct possible future worlds.
Spectacular computer generated imaging gives life to extraordinary
creatures that are at once familiar and strange.
Saturday
October 2, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Venue: Rm 222 at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Termites,
Nick Hilligoss, Australia, Animation, 5 min, English, 2003
Canadian
Premiere
While
Eco, the Pest Controller, is out ridding the world of pests the
natural way, a nest of termites are literally eating him out of
house and home. This calls for the expert termite eater, the Echnida,
and not a moment too soon. Hilarious animation that will have young
and old cheering and rolling on the floor.
&
Cockroach Cocktail, Brigitte Krause, Germany, Documentary,
67 min, 2002
Canadian
Premiere
This
satirical documentary about the common cockroach guides you through
the world of one of the most hated but least understood insects
on earth; a creature that shares our homes, offices, our space,
but not our love. Professional and amateur cockroach experts –
scientists, roach wranglers, rap artists, even the owner of a ‘Cockroach
Hall of Fame’- share stories that ranges from the practical
to the ridiculous in an effort to help you overcome your cockroach
phobias. Winner of the Critic’s Prize at the International
Environmental Film Festival in Goias, Brazil.
Saturday
October 2, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Venue:
Bissell Room at Robarts Library, 130 St. George St .
Wake
Up Call , Daniel Tonitto, UK , Documentary, 6 min, English,
2003
Canadian Premiere
“Fear
makes me feel alive” is one of the sentiments expressed in
this cinematic reflection on the current cult of fear mongering,
terror marketing, media complicity, and the global grassroots opposition
to the continuing war on Iraq . Infinitely more interesting and
creatively satisfying than the plethora of protest-rally videos
making the activist circuits.
&
Wildlife Warriors – Allies of Nature , Daniel
Searle, Australia , Documentary, 55 min, 2003
Canadian Premiere
The ecological consequences of war, and preparations for war, are
rarely reported in the media. Even rarer still is this story, of
a country – Denmark – that is creating a model for how
the military can reduce its impact on the environment during training
exercises. If an outright ban on global armed forces appears unrealistic,
employing best-practices may be the next option.
Saturday
October 2, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Vultures
– The Flying Dustbins, Director’s Name, Austria,
Documentary, 52 min, English, 2001
Canadian
Premiere
Vultures
may be the Cinderella species of the bird world. Although given
a bad rap because they are considered ugly they are actually quite
critical to their ecosystems. They are clever creatures who use
stones as tools, spy on each other, and communicate about the best
locations for fresh food. With side-splitting animated segments,
tongue-in-cheek narration, and innovative aerial footage this documentary
may turn you into a vulture lover, almost.
Saturday
October 2, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
Thirst,
Alan Snitow & Deborah Kaufman, US, Documentary, 60 min, 2004
Canadian
Premiere
Is water
part of a shared “commons,” a human right for all people,
or is it a commodity to be bought, sold and traded in a global marketplace?
Thirst tells the stories of communities in Japan, Bolivia,
India and the United States that are asking these fundamental questions,
as waste becomes the most valuable commodity of the 21st century.
Saturday
October 2, 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Rm 222 at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
The Meatrix, Louis Fox, US, Animation, 4 min, 2003
This humorous
Flash-animation short spoofs the Matrix films. Moopheus, a trenchcoat-clad
cow, initiates Leo, a young naieve pig, into the ugly world of factory
farming and industrial agriculture. Created as part of an innovative
cyber-campaign The Meatrix injects wit into activism.
&
Animals,
Jason Young, Canada, Documentary, 72 min, 2003
Soon after Jason
and Julia Young bought an abandoned farm property in Nova Scotia,
Jason began a year-long experiment that would change his life forever.
The idea seemed simple. If you’re going to eat meat, Jason
thought, then you should raise the animals, get to know them and
their personalities, respect the m
and eventually slaughter them yourself. One of the most personal
and profoundly self-revealing films ever made, this documentary
give the viewer a front seat on the internal ethical rollercoaster
of the main character.
Saturday
October 2, 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Bissell Room at Robarts Library, 130 St. George St.
The Woman and the Sea, Ariane Porto, Brazil, Documentary,
13 min, Portuguese with subtitles, 2003
Canadian
Premiere
Faced
with social stigma, diminishing returns on their labours, and loss
of their fishing grounds, women on the coast of Brazil use video
to document their life, struggles and dreams. A unique collaboration
between filmmaker and community results in a touching documentary
about life beside the sea.
&
Jus'
Call Me Tjarra- Catching Crayfish in Hermanus, Lieza Van Tonder,
South Africa, Documentary, 48 min, 2004
Canadian Premiere
Be prepared
to fall in love with Tjarra, a humble Muslim fisherman who lives
on the outskirts of the popular holiday resort of Hermanus in the
Western Cape of South Africa. With no boats at their disposal, the
local community uses the jetty to stock up on crayfish. Always ready
to assist others, one day Tjarra finds that the courtesies he has
shown start to be repaid. Perhaps one day his dream of building
a mosque will come true.
Co-sponsor:
Networked Intelligence for Development
Saturday
October 2, 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Air Pollution, Nick Hilligoss, Australia, Animation, 5
min, 2003
Canadian
Premiere
So what
do you get when you join the front half of a VW Beetle with the
rear of a Morris Minor van? A very quiet, pollution-free vehicle,
albeit one without an engine. But alternative energy sources are
all around, waiting to be tapped – the sun, the wind, the
rain…maybe even a couple of freeloading rats. Enjoy the ride
on this wily animated short.
&
Melody…Out of Tune, Pankaj Tiwari, India, Docu-Drama,
6 min, 2003
Canadian
Premiere
Music
is a Divine gift, but without quality air to breathe one cannot
imagine even a single note of music. Illustrating the intimate relationship
between humans and nature, the film creatively grapples with the
filmmakers’ dilemma of how to show clean air.
&
Miles to Go, Nina Subramani, India, Documentary, 58 min,
2003
Canadian
Premiere
Almost
twenty years after the Bhopal tragedy, Greenpeace campaigners journey
the length of India to uncover corporate crime and government inaction.
What they found was shocking - pipes releasing untreated effluents,
roads constructed from radioactive materials. The same journey also
reveals something far more important - that people are fighting
for their rights. The journey also reveals something far more important
- people in the South being pro-active instead of the stereotypically
passive and reactive images we see in the media.
Saturday
October 2, 4:30 am – 6:30 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
Under
the Surface – A Journey along the São Francisco River,
Marcus Vinicius Cezar, Brazil, Drama, 105 min, Portugues with subtitles,
2004
Celeste
has a week’s vacation and is trying to catch up with her elusive
boyfriend, Henrique, a photographer on an assignment to document
life along Brazil’s São Francisco River Valley. Their
concurrent adventures introduce them, and us, to a world full of
tales, legends, miracles, superstitions, pilgrims, feasts and secular
traditions that are quickly fading away. A talking canoe is just
one of many delightful reminders that the world is embued with spirit.
Cezar has purposefully chosen to recount the richness of life in
this piece of paradise before it is destroyed by so-called development.
Saturday
October 2, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
Wake
Up Call, Daniel Tonitto, UK, Documentary, 6 min, English, 2003
“Fear
makes me feel alive” is one of the sentiments expressed in
this cinematic reflection on the current cult of fear mongering,
terror marketing, media complicity, and the global grassroots opposition
to the continuing war on Iraq. Infinitely more interesting and creatively
satisfying than the plethora of protest-rally videos making the
activist circuits.
&
Helen’s
War – Portrait of a Dissident, Anna Broinowski, Canada/Australia,
Documentary, 53 min, 2003
Anti-nuclear
campaigner Dr. Helen Caldicott comes out of retirement armed with
a new book and the conviction that she can inspire Americans to
rise up against their own military-industrial complex. Taking place
over a volatile 12 months in which American troops land in Afghanistan
and Iraq, Helen's War is the complex portrait of a blatant optimist,
by a Generation-X cynic in desperate need of conversion who wonders
if a straight-talking dissident like Helen can make a difference.
If you love this planet, take a mental health break with one of
the most articulate voices of sanity around.
Saturday
October 2, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Inheritance – A Fisherman’s Story, Peter Hegedus,
Australia, Documentary, 75 min, Hungarian with subtitles, 2002
Canadian
Premiere
When
a dam burst at a Romanian goldmine in early 2000, more than 100,000
tons of cyanide was released into the Tisza River, devastating its
ecology as well as the livelihoods of subsistence fishermen in neighboring
Hungary. Fisherman Balazs Meszaros grapples with the effects of
the disaster on his community, and travels to Australia to confront
the corporate forces behind the mining operation. A riveting portrait
of one man’s tenacity and hope in the inherent goodness of
humanity.
Saturday
October 2, 9:00 pm – 11:00 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
One of Many, Jo Béranger & Doris Buttignol,
Germany, Documentary, 94 min, 2003
Canadian
Premiere
Sally
Tisiga is a member of the Wolf Clan of the Kaska Nation. Buckle-up
as she takes us on a road-trip across the magnificent landscape
of Western Canada searching for her own history. She’s revisiting
the memory of generations of native children, wrenched from their
culture and the land, whose pain still impacts native people today.
Her search is not for victimhood, it’s for strength and inspiration
as she advocates for native children in the child welfare system.
Saturday
October 2, 9:00 pm – 11:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Call
to the Dark Side, Barbara Klutinis, US, Experimental Drama,
3 min, 2003
The
final moments before a child takes a great leap. Is it a metaphor
of humanity plunging into self-destruction, or a leap of faith to
create change in the world? This wonderful short launches a programme
of thought-provoking, creative, and funny shorts from around the
world.
&
Here, Graeme Powell, Canada, Experimental, 5 min, 2004
An
expressionistic treatment through images, at times abstract, and
music, of the current fate of the countryside as it becomes swallowed
by urban growth and development.
&
Indigestion,
Andréa Cohen, Canada, Experimental, 2 min, 2003
Indigestion
is a metaphor, a bird-eye view, a searing dive inside two bodies
and other living organisms, increasingly threatened with death.
&
The
Architect, Rick Fischer & Don Rice, Canada, Experimental,
4 min, 2004
The
juxtaposition of natural and human-made elements in the landscape
evoke the false nature/culture dichotomy so prevalent in our society.
&
Transit,
Anne Marie Nakagawa, Canada, Experimental, 9 min, 2001
Transit
is a collage of a city in movement. Soft-focus images transform
the familiar into a strangely fascinating playground, while ambient
audio is manipulated to achieve an almost religious soundscape.
A haunting lament on life in the fast lane.
&
Oil
Wells: Sturgeon Road and 9th Street, Christina
Battle, Canada, Experimental, 3 min, 2002
The
repetitive rhythm and motion of oil wells, a sight common in northern
Alberta, becomes a symbol of the monotony of the energy powered
industrial complex.
&
If
You Lived Here, You’d Be Home By Now, Diane Bonder, US,
Animated, 15 min, 2001
Stories
ripped from the headlines of a small-town newspaper give rise to
images which explore divisiveness over land, the relationship between
public and private space, and the concept of home.
&
Come
Alive, Dylan Griffin, Canada, Mockumentary, 2 min, 2001
A
mock commercial that documents the growing problem of pollution
on the beaches and deserts of Baja, Mexico.
&
Lightyear,
Dan Sokolowski, Canada, Experimental, 3 min, , 2003
Reflect
on the cycles of nature with a trip around the Sun from January
to December 2001 A.D as seen from 45° 1’N, 75° 38’W.
&
Ocean Chronicles, Leandro Blanco, Spain, Experimental
Documentary, 5 min, 2003
Canadian
Premiere
A
kaleidoscope of images and sounds reflecting humanity's relationship
with the sea. They are unfinished chronicles, for the responsibility
on how the final chapter is written will depend entirely on each
one of us.
&
Precious
Little Tiny Love, Allyson Mitchell, Canada, Experimental, 3
min, 2003
Using
small flocked plastic animals in time-lapsed landscapes to reflect
the guilt of the socially conscious carnivore, the filmmaker sings
an homage to creatures that get crunched.
&
tangly
wood, Peter Stinson, Canada, Animation, 13 min, 2003
Loupe,
a young puppet artist spends her days collecting found objects to
create her art. One day, she finds something that brings back a
memory and drives her into a frenzy of painting and creation.
&
One
Stop Shopping, Christopher McKay, Canada, Animation, 4 min,
2001
Step
inside an upscale supermarket with two consumers infatuated with
its "fabulousness", and witness their gradual submission
to the spell of the marketplace.
&
Waiting
for the Ice to Melt, Darlene Naponse, Canada, Animation, 4
min, 2003
An experimental vision of ice melting, signifying what we wait for
and what waits for us.
&
Two
By Two, Emily Dodge, US, Animation, 9 min, 2003
The
Great Flood is the backdrop for this gut-splitting animated adventure
featuring the animals of the Ark, sans Noah. This is where they
tell their vision of what happened .
&
Apnea,
Steve Moreau, France, Experimental, 4 min, 2003
Whilst
doing an Apnea dive, a man lets his imagination wander to the elements
that surround us, posing an open question and providing a concluding
metaphor for this eclectic shorts programme.
Sunday
October 3, 9:00 am – 10:00 am
Venue: Courtyard at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
A celebration of faith-based teachings, practices, and rituals around
how we can live in harmony with nature. Join members of the Baha'i,
Buddhist, Christian, First Nations, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim,and Zoroastrian
communities as we share and honour environmental and spiritual wisdom.
People who have no affiliation with a particular faith are also
welcome to participate.
Sunday
October 3, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Bissell Room at Robarts Library, 130 St. George St.
The Red Pill, David Sheen, Canada, Drama, 25 min,
2003
This
scratch video culture jam samples twenty-five Hollywood feature
films creating a subversive, sometimes hilarious, deep ecology riff
using the language of the masses. In a vertically integrated media
environment a little editing software can be a powerful tool.
&
Think
Twice, Mallory Graham, US, Documentary, 7 min, 2003
When
adults start droning on about the woes of the world two typical
North American teens tune out and into a fun spoof of a certain
credit card company’s ‘priceless’ advertising.
Created in collaboration with real high school students, this videos
say it’s time to take a look at the real price-tag of the
things we buy.
&
Suzuki Speaks, Tony Papa, Canada, Documentary, 45 min,
2003
If
there is a Canadian environmentalist who has the stature of a rock
star it is Dr. David Suzuki. Suzuki Speaks captures the passion,
vision and inspiration of world-renowned scientist and environmentalist
Dr. Suzuki as he speaks about the human animal and our place in
the universe. His powerful words, mixed with stunning live action
and digital images, create a documentary that you won't just watch
- you'll experience.
Sunday
October 3, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
The
Water Thieves, Sébastien Élias, Canada, Drama,
14 min, French with subtitles, 2003
Montréal.
There's no more water anywhere. People are thirsty and the situation
is critical. Some will do anything to get their hands on the precious
life-giving fluid. How far would you go?
&
The
Never, Never Water, Alessandra Speciale, Italy/Burkina Faso,
Documentary, 48 min, Subtitles, 2002
Women
line up overnight to fill up their containers so their families
can eat and wash, but before they can get to the village tap local
businessmen with steel drums have stolen gallons of the precious
liquid. And even earlier, a multi-national corporation has wrested
control of the country’s water supply. This beautiful and
cautionary documentary illustrates why the women call it the “never,
never water.”
Sunday
October 3, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Mining?
No Thanks! One Month in Tambogrande, Diane
St-Antoine, Canada, Documentary, 51 min, 2004
Manhattan
Minerals, a Canadian mining company, has been trying for four years
to build a mine in Northern Peru on land it claims is a desert.
In sharp contrast, this beautiful and thoughtful documentary shows
us that Tambogrande is a vibrant, productive agricultural community.
The people know that the environmental impact assessment of the
mine would not be acceptable in Canada, and they are fighting to
ensure that their government won’t accept it either.
Sunday
October 3, 11:00 am – 1:00 pm
Venue: Room 204 at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Free
The
Ecology of the Marketplace - A Panel on the intricacies of getting
Distribution
You’ve
made your film, and now you’d like it to find an audience,
a large audience. And, it would be nice if you could make some money
too, or at least pay off your credit card bills. Come and learn
from experts in the field of distribution. What are the realities
of the marketplace? Are there markets you haven’t even thought
about? What should you keep in mind before you begin your next production?
The panelists represent a wide range of works and markets.
Sunday
October 3, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm
Venue: Room 204 at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Free
Brown-Bag
it with the Filmmakers
Bring your lunch, or purchase one at the Innis Café, and
join a facilitated lunch-time discussion among attending filmmakers
highlighting the challenges, strategies, and directions of environmental
filmmaking around the world.
Sunday
October 3, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Venue: Bissell Room at Robarts Library, 130 St. George St.
Youth, Camera, Action, Canada, 30 min, English, 2003
World
Premieres
Join the Eco-Generation. For two weeks in August, a diverse group
of teenagers participated in the second annual Youth, Camera, Action
video production camp - a co-production between Planet in Focus
and Charles Street Video. Their snappy productions are unveiled
today!
Canada in Focus logo
&
Youth
Videos from the Gulf Islands Film & Television School
Sunday
October 3, 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
Walking with Ghosts, Caroline Underwood, Canada,
Documentary, 45 min, 2004
Walking
with Ghosts is a rare wildlife documentary that profiles a woman
scientist and the animals and ecosystem she studies. Elizabeth Hofer,
a predator biologist, has dedicated more than 18 years to tracking
the intricate relationship between the elusive lynx and its prey,
the snowshoe hare. They are the very spirit of these icy northern
forests and their tracks in the snow leave many stories for those
who know how to read them.
&
A Wild Dog’s Story, Mike Holding, UK, Docu-drama,
48 min, 2002
Canadian Premiere
This
intimate film recreates the dramatic events in the life of "Newky"
- an African Wild Dog. It is a poignant tale of struggle, endurance
and triumph, and of one creature’s extraordinary spirit to
win through against almost impossible odds. An emotionally powerful
true story, which highlights the challenges facing one of the worlds
most endangered carnivores.
Sunday
October 3 – 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
New Eldorado, Tibor Kocsis, Hungary, Documentary, 59 min,
Romanian with subtitles, 2004
World Premiere
In Romania,
the biggest gold mine in Europe is being prepared to be open. A
Canadian company is planning to build a tailing pond for storing
the cyanide waste water used for extraction of gold, a hundred times
bigger than the one which caused the catastrophe of the River Tisza
in 2000 (see The Inheritance, Saturday 7:00 pm). The thousands
of people would have to be relocated, and the mountains surrounding
the villages would disappear within 15 years as 20 tonnes of dynamite
is used per day.
Sunday
October 3 – 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Bissell Room at Robarts Library, 130 St. George St.
Bastards, Mort Ransen, Canada, 98 min, Drama, 2003
Sam, a
retired man, has had his home invaded by a homeless young woman
who is a professional protester, at war with all the bastards, mostly
men, whom she considers are making a mess of the planet. The film
is literally seen through the eyes of Sam, one of the two main characters
in the story. Except for the final shot, we never see him, but only
what he sees. We know only what he knows and we find out about things
when he does.. This experimental feature uses a hand-held video
camera and a crew of only seven people to achieve unusual intimacy.
The story, written especially for the small camera, was shot in
a way that would have been impossible with conventional technology.
Warning: colourful language and nudity.
Sunday
October 3 – 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
Save Nature, Edgar Wilkening, Germany, PSA, 2 min, German
with subtitles, 2003
Canadian Premiere
What
if all the creative energy, resources, and airtime that goes into
advertising – selling consumer products and services –
were focused on saving nature? This slick public service announcement
hints at the possibilities.
&
Uts’am/Witness, Jeremy Williams, Canada, Documentary,
14 min, 2003
The
Squamish people of British Columbia have seen their forests steadily
destroyed by logging. Now through a unique cultural exchange programme
that explores the concepts of Dialogue, Ceremony, Art, Ecology,
and Home, they are working to help non-native people re-build relationships
to the land. Their hope is that if we understand and respect the
forests more perhaps we will endanger them less.
&
Oona
River: Between Forest and Sea, Jennifer Rashleigh, Canada,
Documentary, 37 min, 2003
Tucked
away on BC's rugged North coast lives one of the last homesteading
communities. Meet three generations of Oona River residents, who
use their skills, adaptability and practical environmentalist approach
to live richly and harmoniously in a land with no grocery store,
no restaurant and no road to the mainland. Their biggest challenge
for survival is not the long winters or the bears, but the provincial
government’s capital-intensive policy decisions on logging
and fishing that may just regulate Oona River out of existence.
Sponsored
by: The Richard Ivey Foundation
Sunday
October 3 – 4:30 pm – 6:30 pm
Venue: Town Hall at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
Turn
to the Wind, Lea Nakonechny, Canada, Experimental, 6 min, 2002
Shot
on location at the Sun Bridge Wind Farm near Gull Lake, Saskatchewan,
Turn to the Wind is visual exploration of towering wind turbines
in the unique landscape that surrounds them. The film is both a
"day in the life" of these amazing high-tech structures
and an attempt to reconcile the new dynamic between landscape and
technology in Southwest Saskatchewan.
&
The Venus Theory, Pasi Toiviainen,
Finland, Documentary, 52 min, 2004
Canadian
Premiere
Is
the world warming up? How much? How quickly? What kind of an effect
can the climate change caused by humans have on the Earth? Trying
to sort through all the conflicting information in the media is
enough to make your head spin. This documentary clearly and engagingly
explains the greenhouse effect and answers the question: could our
planet ever get as hot as Venus?
Sunday
October 3 – 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
Lustre,
Art Jones, US, Drama, 81 min, English, 2003
Canadian Premiere
New
York's losing its soul says Hugo, a small-time loan shark. Faceless
buildings and vacant people are chipping away at what's left of
the real, old-time New York. Shot in the Big Apple shortly after
9/11, this is a magical story of renewal in uncertain times. It
questions the foundations of the urban landscape and the values
of our metropolized lives, and finds a glimmer of hope inside all
of us.
Sunday
October 3 – 9:00 pm – 11:00 pm
Venue: Al Green Theatre, 750 Spadina Avenue
Join us for the presentation of the Eco
Hero awards to outstanding Community and Media Industry leaders;
and the awards for Best Canadian and International Shorts and Feature
Length Productions. Following the presentations please join us for
party to celebrate our fifth anniversary and to toast the many filmmakers,
sponsors, partners and volunteers who have contributed to our continued
success over the years.
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