Play Again

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Saturday, Mar 2, 3P/River Forest Park District - Tickets

Meg Merrill/2010/53 or 80  min/FAMILY

One generation from now most people in the U.S. will have spent more time in the virtual world than in nature. New media technologies have improved our lives in countless ways. Information now appears with a click. Overseas friends are part of our daily lives. And even grandma loves Wii.

But what are we missing when we are behind screens? And how will this impact our children, our society, and eventually, our planet? At a time when children play more behind screens than outside, Play Again explores the changing balance between the virtual and natural worlds. Is our connection to nature disappearing down the digital rabbit hole?

 AWARDS: BEST EDUCATIONAL FILM, Ecofilm, Prague 2010. BEST OF FEST, Colorado Environmental Film Festival 2010. Official Selection, DC Environmental Film Festival. Official Selection, Bioneers Moving Image Film Festival. Official Selection, Reel Earth Film Festival.

Programming note: will be shown with Forest in Flux.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This moving and humorous documentary follows six teenagers who, like the “average American child,” spend five to fifteen hours a day behind screens. PLAY AGAIN unplugs these teens and takes them on their first wilderness adventure – no electricity, no cell phone coverage, no virtual reality.

Through the voices of children and leading experts including journalist Richard Louv, sociologist Juliet Schor, environmental writer Bill McKibben, educators Diane Levin and Nancy Carlsson-Paige, neuroscientist Gary Small, parks advocate Charles Jordan, and geneticist David Suzuki, PLAY AGAIN investigates the consequences of a childhood removed from nature and encourages action for a sustainable future.

 Where we are coming from

Seventy years ago, the first televisions became commercially available. The first desktop computers went on sale 30 years ago, and the first cell phones a mere 15 years ago. During their relatively short tenure these three technologies have changed the way we live. Some of these changes are good. Television can now rapidly disseminate vital information. Computers turned that flow of information into a two-way street. Cell phones enable unprecedented connectivity with our fellow human beings. And the merging of cell phones and the internet has even allowed protest movements around the world to organize and thrive.

But there’s also a down side. For many people, especially children, screens have become the de facto medium by which the greater world is experienced. A virtual world of digitally transmitted pictures, voices, and scenarios has become more real to this generation than the world of sun, water, air, and living organisms, including fellow humans.

The average American child now spends over eight hours in front of a screen each day. She emails, texts, and updates her status incessantly. He can name hundreds of corporate logos, but less than ten native plants. She aspires to have hundreds of online friends, most she may never meet in person.  He masters complicated situations presented in game after game, but often avoids simple person-to-person conversation. They are almost entirely out of contact with the world that, over millions of years of evolution, shaped human beings — the natural world.

The long-term consequences of this experiment on human development remain to be seen, but the stakes couldn’t be higher. By most accounts, this generation will face multiple crises — environmental, economic and social. Will this screen world — and its bevy of virtual experiences — have adequately prepared these “digital natives” to address the problems they’ll face, problems on whose resolution their own survival may depend?

As we stand at a turning point in our relationship with earth, we find ourselves immersed in the gray area between the natural and virtual worlds. From a global perspective of wonder and hope, PLAY AGAIN examines this unique point in history.

Programming note:  will be shown with A Forest in Flux.

Contested Streets: Breaking New York City Gridlock

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Saturday, Mar 2, 3P/Greenline Wheels, Oak Park - Tickets

Stefan Schaefer/2008/57 min (25 min clip)/FAMILY

Through interviews with leading historians, urban planners, and government officials, Contested Streets: Breaking New York City Gridlock explores the history and culture of New York City streets from pre-automobile times to the present. This examination allows for an understanding of how the city, though the most well served by mass transit in the United States, has slowly relinquished what was a rich, multi-dimensional conception of the street as public space to a mindset that prioritizes the rapid movement of cars and trucks over all other functions.

Central to the story is a comparison of New York to what is experienced in London, Paris and Copenhagen. Interviews and footage shot in these cities showcase how curtailing automobile use in recent years has improved air quality, mitigated noise pollution and enriched commercial, recreational and community interaction. Congestion pricing, bus rapid transit (BRT) and pedestrian and bike infrastructure schemes and looked at in depth. New York City, though to many the most vibrant and dynamic city on Earth, still has lessons to learn from Old Europe. Written by Stefan Schaefer.

Programming note:  will be screened with Working Bikes and Bikes Belong.

A Wild Idea

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Sunday, Mar 3, 1P/Oak Park Public Library - Tickets

26 min/

A Wild Idea is an award-winning documentary about the Yasuni-ITT Initiative, Ecuador's unprecedented proposal for fighting global climate change.  In exchange for payments from the world community, the country will leave untouched its largest oil reserves. If the proposal is accepted, it will conserve the Amazon’s biodiversity, protect the rights of indigenous people and avoid the emission of millions of tons of CO2 into the atmosphere.

A Wild Idea was directed and produced by Verónica Moscoso as her master's thesis at UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.  

The film takes the viewer to the Yasuní National Park, in the Ecuadorian Amazon, capturing the rain forest’s stunning biodiversity. It also focuses in the millions of barrels of oil lying beneath the part of the park known as the ITT Block.

Exploiting the ITT seemed to be the logical step Ecuador had to take, but political changes have transformed the way the country views oil development. Through testimony representing different perspectives and rich archival video, A Wild Idea shows how the seemingly utopian ideal of keeping valuable oil underground turned into an official proposal.

As the film progresses, the complex initiative becomes easy to understand. The audience sees what’s at stake if the proposal is not accepted. And the political twists and turns that made it possible and that could also threaten the success of this revolutionary idea.

If accepted, the Yasuní-ITT initiative will protect perhaps the most biodiverse place on Earth. It would also respect the rights of two of the last nomadic indigenous people that live there in voluntary isolation. And it would avoid the emission of hundreds of millions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

A Wild Idea is a thought provoking film that explores the complexity of oil development within a fragile ecosystem, its local and global implications, and its effects on the planet as a whole.

AWARDS: Best Student Film at the Green Screen Film Festival in 2011; Official Selection of Toronto International Film Festival.

Programming note:  will be seen with Pipe Dreams.

A Sea Change

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Sunday, Mar 3, 3P/Holley Court Terrace, Oak  Park - Tickets

Barbara Ettinger/2009/60  min/Mature theme

 Imagine a world without fish.  It’s a frightening premise, and it’s happening right now.  A Sea Change follows the journey of retired history teacher Sven Huseby on his quest to discover what is happening to the world’s oceans.  After reading Elizabeth Kolbert’s “The Darkening Sea,” Sven becomes obsessed with the rising acidity of the oceans and what this “sea change” bodes for mankind. His quest takes him to Alaska, California, Washington, and Norway as he uncovers a worldwide crisis that most people are unaware of.

Speaking with oceanographers, marine biologists, climatologists, and artists, Sven discovers that global warming is only half the story of the environmental catastrophe that awaits us. Excess carbon dioxide is dissolving in our oceans, changing sea water chemistry. The more acidic water makes it difficult for tiny creatures at the bottom of the food web to form their shells. The effects could work their way up to the fish 1 billion people depend upon for their source of protein.

A touching portrait

A Sea Change is also a touching portrait of Sven’s relationship with his grandchild Elias. As Sven keeps a correspondence with the little boy, he mulls over the world that he is leaving for future generations. A disturbing and essential companion piece to An Inconvenient Truth, A Sea Change brings home the indisputable fact that our lifestyle is changing the earth, despite our rhetoric or wishful thinking.

The first of its kind

A Sea Change is the first documentary about ocean acidification, directed by Barbara Ettinger and co-produced by Sven Huseby of Niijii Films. Chock full of scientific information, the feature-length film is also a beautiful paen to the ocean world and an intimate story of a Norwegian-American family whose heritage is bound up with the sea.

Programming note: will be seen with Stories of TRUST Alaska.

A Forest in Flux

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Saturday, Mar 2, 3P/River Forest Park District - Tickets

Travis Kidd/2012/11 min/FAMILY

A Forest in Flux explains the impacts of a recent mountain pine beetle outbreak in the Rocky Mountains. The film takes a narrative approach to explain the ecology of the mountain pine beetle to kids aged 8-12. We follow a young boy on his quest to discover what is killing all the pine trees in his back yard.  He uses a smart phone to do take photos of what he sees and does research about the clues he is finding.

This is a fine cut of the Travis Wade Kidd's second year film for the MFA program in Montana State University's Master of Fine Arts program in "Science and Natural History Filmmaking" in Bozeman, Montana.

Filmmaker Bio

Born and raised in Northeast/Lower Michigan, Kidd had a strong connection to the natural landscapes surrounding him.  He studied Ecology and Anthropology at Northern Michigan University in Marquette, a mid-sized adventure town in Michigan's rustic Upper Peninsula.  Kidd is an avid bird enthusiast and an amateur naturalist who had "always carried (with me) the goal of one day becoming a documentary filmmaker."

Kidd has produced several short student documentary projects on topics ranging from raptor migration studies, to research in cultural heritage, to forest ecology and, in Forest in Flux, the Mountain Pine Beetle outbreaks of the Rocky Mountain West.

AWARDS: Official Selection, Element Film Festival 2012

Programming note: will be shown with Play Again.

For the Price of a Cup of Coffee

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Thursday, Feb 21, 7P/Whole Foods Market, River Forest preview night- RSVP call 708.366.1045

Hypatia Angelique Porter/2007/15 min

What is the cost of convenience?  For the Price of a Cup of Coffee is a short environmental documentary examining the life cycle of a paper cup and the repercussions of a society reliant on convenience.  Why are less than 1% of coffeeshop patrons bringing their own cup?  Why do we have so much garbage, and where does it go? What is the true cost of a disposable culture?

Shot throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, including interviews with local activists, environmental experts and coffeeshop owners. This film is full of information that all consumers should know about the products that we use everyday, and the steps we need to make towards a more sustainable world.

AWARDS:  Festival Favorite, Wild and Scenic Environmental Film Festival 2008. Best Documentary, Epidemic Student Film Festival 2007.

Programming note:  will be screeened with Black Gold and Fair Trade Africa.

The Majestic Plastic Bag: A Mockumentary

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Saturday, Mar 2, 3P/River Forest Public Library - Tickets

4 min/

This mockumentary is narrated by Academy Award-winner Jeremy Irons and tracks the “migration” of a plastic bag from a grocery store parking lot to the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch” in the Pacific Ocean.

Programming note:  will be screened and discussed along with Bag It - is your life too plastic?
 

Bag It - is your life too plastic?

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Saturday, Mar 2, 3P/River Forest Public Library - Tickets

74  min/FAMILY

Bag It has been garnering awards at film festivals across the nation. What started as a documentary about plastic bags evolved into a wholesale investigation into plastics and their effect on our waterways, oceans, and even our bodies.  Join the Bag It movement and decide for yourself how plastic your life will be.

 

Program note:  Bag It will be screened and discussed along with The Majestic Plastic Bag: A Mockumentary.
Film program sponsored by Keep Oak Park Beautiful.

Food Patriots (70 mn rough cut)

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Sunday, Mar 3, 12P/

Euclid Avenue United Methodist Church

, Oak Park (clip) -

Tickets

Tuesday, Feb 12, 7P/

Washington Irving School

 - FREE;

Jeff Spitz; Jennifer Amdur Spitz/2013/70 minutes/Family

"Food Patriots" focuses on an issue that directly touches all of us — food. The film tells personal stories that show ordinary people taking control of food and creating healthier lives, a less polluted environment, a new sense of community and new jobs. Touched by his son's struggle with food-borne illness, filmmaker Jeff Spitz weaves one family's experience into a tapestry of stories about people who are changing the way Americans eat, buy and educate the next generation about food.

South East Oak Park Community Organization is sponsoring this FREE sneak preview of the 70  minute rough cut of the film.  Join Chicago-based filmmaker, Jeff Spitz, to view and discuss his film on Tuesday, February 12, 2013, at Washington Irving School (1125 S. Cuyler Ave., Oak Park, IL) in Oak Park at 7 p.m.  Join the Facebook event to receive updates.  Call 773-315-1109 for more information.

Fairtrade Africa

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Thursday, Feb 21, 7P/Whole Foods Market, River Forest preview night- RSVP call 708.366.1045; Saturday, Mar 2, 7P/First United Church, Oak Park - Tickets

Rob Holmes (Founder/Pres. GLP)/2012/5 min

Fairtrade Africa - Short Version from Green Living Project on Vimeo.

AWARDS: Produced by award-winning media company Green Planet Films.

Programming note: will be screened with Black Gold and For the Price of a Cup of Coffee.