Showing posts with label environmental movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environmental movement. Show all posts
Friday, September 17, 2010
Director Kevin Tomlinson talks about his film "Back to the Garden"
Back in 1988 I took a road trip that led me on a strange journey. By chance, I saw a funky poster advertising a Healing Gathering in rural Washington State. Curious to meet this community of backcountry hippies twenty years after Woodstock, I decided to go.
Upon arrival, I felt transported, finding myself among magic buses and tepees in a meadow filled with beaded flower children communing with nature. I shot hours of dancing, drumming, singing and celebration. I recorded extensive interviews with some of the most genuine, sincere beings I’d ever met.
With no plans for the material at the time and skeptical how it would be received during the Reagan/Bush years, the project was shelved. But it didn’t sit quietly. The images wouldn’t let go. 18 years later I asked myself, where have all the “flowers” gone?
So I began a new journey, a journey to find what had happened to all the dreams of getting back to the land, setting one’s soul free and environmental utopia. How had they survived living off-grid and below the poverty level for years? Had anyone changed course and gone mainstream? What had become of their dreams of self-reliance, simplicity, and freedom? And how did their children (now in their twenties) feel about their own “Hippie Kid” upbringings?
Not so long ago, those “Hippie” communities and their values were considered way too radical and fringe by the mainstream. Today, the Green Movement, looking to protect the earth for future generations, is wholeheartedly embracing them.
Back to the Garden presents a time-lapse view—twenty years in the lives of a group of idealist baby boomers who rejected and dropped out of the mainstream, who went back to the land, overcoming many personal sacrifices In pursuit of their dreams. It’s also a story about the personal consequences of those radical dreams and choices. Not only is this their story, but ours too, because the counterculture of the sixties affected all of us and forever changed our ideas about how we define love, wealth, spirituality and freedom.
Kevin Tomlinson
Healing Gathering (1988)
Labels:
counterculture,
environmental movement,
green energy,
hippie,
peace,
peace symbol
Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Director Paul Lynch comments on the making of his film "Birth of a Movement"
On January 28th 1969, just off the coast of Santa Barbara, oil burst out of the ocean like a black artesian well. The fallout and mishap were disheartening to say the least as residents gathered on the beaches to witness the oil slick coming to shore; there was nothing to stop it.
The Birth of a Movement is a documentary film investigating the 1969 oil blow out in Santa Barbara, which is considered by many to be the birth of the “modern environmental movement.” The activism inspired by this disaster quickly spread across the country and spawned landmark legislation, the first Earth Day, and the Environmental Studies program at UCSB.
The film aims to educate viewers about this important piece of history and motivate present and future generations alike to become good environmental stewards. Yet, this goal is unachievable without drawing connections between oil-development and the global financial crisis, climate change, and social injustice. Here we look 40 years back so as to look 40 years forward.
One of the greatest challenges of the 21st Century is how to deal with the dual-threat of global climate change and the inequities created by a capitalist dominated economy. We believe the solution is in merging the movements. Increased consumption, peak oil, polar caps melting, wars, pollution, and inequality reveal only one side of the story. The other side is the rise of grassroots movements redefining environmentalism in the 21st Century; it is The Birth of a Movement.
Board of Advisors
Carl Pope, Executive Director of the Sierra Club
Marc McGinnes, J.D., Senior Lecturer Emeritus Environmental Studies, UCSB
Prof. Richard Appelbaum, Director MA Global & International Studies, UCSB
Paul Relis, Founding Director CEC, Executive Vice President for CR&R, Inc.
Monique Sonoquie, Founder, Indigenous Youth Foundation
Charlie Eckberg, Environmental Consultant & SB Environmental Leader
The Birth of a Movement is a documentary film investigating the 1969 oil blow out in Santa Barbara, which is considered by many to be the birth of the “modern environmental movement.” The activism inspired by this disaster quickly spread across the country and spawned landmark legislation, the first Earth Day, and the Environmental Studies program at UCSB.
The film aims to educate viewers about this important piece of history and motivate present and future generations alike to become good environmental stewards. Yet, this goal is unachievable without drawing connections between oil-development and the global financial crisis, climate change, and social injustice. Here we look 40 years back so as to look 40 years forward.
One of the greatest challenges of the 21st Century is how to deal with the dual-threat of global climate change and the inequities created by a capitalist dominated economy. We believe the solution is in merging the movements. Increased consumption, peak oil, polar caps melting, wars, pollution, and inequality reveal only one side of the story. The other side is the rise of grassroots movements redefining environmentalism in the 21st Century; it is The Birth of a Movement.
Board of Advisors
Carl Pope, Executive Director of the Sierra Club
Marc McGinnes, J.D., Senior Lecturer Emeritus Environmental Studies, UCSB
Prof. Richard Appelbaum, Director MA Global & International Studies, UCSB
Paul Relis, Founding Director CEC, Executive Vice President for CR&R, Inc.
Monique Sonoquie, Founder, Indigenous Youth Foundation
Charlie Eckberg, Environmental Consultant & SB Environmental Leader
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