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is still active, but it is now also appended to the archives of this blog.)
The Salem Film Festival is bringing some incredible films to Salem from Feb. 27-March 3. See www.salemfilmfest.com for the whole schedule. But I'd like to particularly draw your attention to two special films/events.
On Friday, Feb. 27, Brazilian filmmaker Denise Zmekhol will present clips and discussion on her film, "Children of the Amazon," from 11-12:15 in the Martin Luther King Room, Ellison Campus Center. We will then take her to lunch at the Oliveiras (Brazilian) restaurant in Peabody.
On Tuesday, March 3, HealthLink has organized a dinner for filmmaker David Novak, whose film "Burning the Future: Coal in America" will screen at 7:30 pm at the Salem Cinema. We'll meet at the Thai Place next to the Cinema at 5:45.
I'm attaching descriptions of these two films below. Please let me know if you're interested in attending the lunch and/or the dinner--
In Burning the Future: Coal in America, writer/director David Novack examines the explosive conflict between the coal industry and residents of West Virginia. Confronted by emerging “clean coal” energy policies, local activists watch a world blind to the devastation caused by coal's extraction. Faced with toxic ground water, the obliteration of 1.4 million acres of mountains, and a government that appeases industry, our heroes demonstrate a strength of purpose and character in their improbable fight to arouse the nation's help in protecting their mountains, saving their families, and preserving their way of life.
Filmmaker's Statement:
I invite you to join me on a journey, one I launched with open eyes and an open mind. As I began filming in the lush mountains of West Virginia, I thought I was telling the story of Coal - the historic role it played in building America, and the incredible position it holds today - providing Americans with half our electricity. Then I met Maria Gunnoe. Maria and thousands of people living in Appalachia are under environmental assault. Their land is destroyed, their loved ones are ill and the mountains they love are being blown away - in the name of “cheap energy” for every American. But now, they are fighting to restore their cherished way of life. And with every new coal-fired power plant proposed across the globe, their fight become harder. Join me as these true heroes take us by the hand and ask us to live in their shoes for a day, and to think hard about the energy future that we all share.
Children of the Amazon follows Brazilian filmmaker Denise Zmekhol as she travels a modern highway deep into the Amazon in search of the Indigenous Surui and Negarote children she photographed fifteen years ago. Part road movie, part time travel, her journey tells the story of what happened to life in the largest forest on Earth when a road was built straight through its heart.
For countless generations, the Amazon rainforest provided a home to the Surui and Negarote people who lived in what they called “forest time”— utterly beyond the realm of contemporary human life. Their only contact with the “outside” world was through rubber tappers, who first settled the forest in the 19th century and whose work did no harm to the trees.
And then . . . everything changed. Footpaths gave way to a road and then a highway cutting through 2000 miles of forest. With the coming of this connection to the rest of Brazil, the world of “forest time” was overrun by farmers, loggers, and cattle ranchers. Lush forest was clear-cut and burned, deadly diseases killed off thousands of Indians, and “forest time” suffered an irreversible transformation.
Zmekhol’s cinematic journey combines intimate interviews with her personal and poetic meditation on environmental devastation, resistance and renewal. The result is a unique vision of the Amazon rainforest told in part by the Indigenous people who experienced first contact with the modern world less than forty years ago.
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