Reel Earth Movies Re-Screenings:
Deep Green
Tonight Wednesday 28 September 2011
7.30pm @ Waikato Environment Centre
Level One, 25 Ward Street, Hamilton
Deep Green
(101 min)
Tomorrow Thursday 29 September 2011
Tide of Change
A Mongolian Couch
Landscapes at the World's End
Marion Stoddart: The Work of 1000
7.30pm @ Waikato Environment Centre
Level One, 25 Ward Street, Hamilton
Tide of Change
(12 min)
BEST ULTRA SHORT AWARD
Director: Amie Batalibasi
Filmmaker Amie Batalibasi visited her family village of LIlisiana, Solomon Islands, at a time when the village was affected by the extreme high tides due to climate change. Batalibasi documents the stories of the people, interwoven with events surrounding the loss of a loved one, as the sea rises around a community on the brink of inevitable change.
A Mongolian Couch
(12 min)
Directors: Eva Arnold and George Clipp
Begzsuren lives with his wife and four children in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia and possesses an inspiring passion to improve both his family's and his community's lot. Installing a rain water shower, changing his family's diet, planting trees, Begzsuren is a busy, dedicated and extremely forward-thinking Mongolian. Begzsuren welcomes guests into his home from all over the world, offering aspects of traditional Mongolian culture and in exchange his guests offer insight into how they live and work back home. Begzsuren is exploring and inviting the world into his home, slowly but surely improving his own world.
Landscapes at the World's Ends
(30 min)
BEST NEW ZEALAND CINEMATOGRAPHY AWARD
Director: Richard Sidey
A non-verbal visual journey to the polar regions of our planet portrayed through a triptych montage of photography and video recorded above the Arctic Circle and below the Antarctic Convergence. New Zealand nature photographer and filmmaker Richard Sidey documents light and time in an effort to share his experiences and the beauty that exists over the frozen seas.
Marion Stoddart: The Work of 1000
(30 min)
BEST SHORT FILM AWARD
Director: Dorie Clark
An unlikely activist, Marion Stoddart lived next to one of America’s most polluted rivers and unexpectedly transformed herself from a housewife and mother to an environmental leader and citizen hero honored by the United Nations. Film chronicles Stoddart's unwavering belief that one person can make a difference.