BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-40183
SEQUENCE:40183
CREATED:20040602T002400Z
DESCRIPTION:"RECLAIM THE COMMONS" WEEK BENEFIT FILM FESTIVAL     SUNDAY JUNE 6TH 2-8 PM 
  NEW COLLEGE OF CALIFORNIA CULTURAL CENTER  766 VALENCIA STREET , SAN 
 FRANCISCO     SPONSORED BY NEW COLLEGE ACTIVISM + SOCIAL CHANGE; CULTURE, 
 ECOLOGY + SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITY; and MEDIA STUDIES     Schedule:  2:00pm - 
 Velorution  3:00pm - We Are Traffic  4:00pm - Greening of Cuba  5:00pm - 
 Global Banquet  6:00PM - Shorts  7:00pm -  Fed Up     Film Info:     
 Velorution: One City's Solution to the Automobile  1996  28 minutes  
 Produced & Directed by Bruce Petschek & Charles Phred Churchill     
 Velorution is a dynamic half-hour portrait of Havana, Cuba, in the period 
 just following the collapse of the Soviet Union when, for lack of oil, the 
 city adopted the bicycle as one of the dominant forms of transportation.    
  While the battle against pollution, traffic mortality, and urban gridlock 
 falters in most cities, Havana has proved that the bicycle can move a large 
 number of commuters. Taking the lead from some industrialized, 
 bicycle-friendly cities in Europe, Cuba ordered 1.2 million bicycles from 
 China, and thus began their trek toward a human-powered 'Velorution.'     
 Drawing in part from an earlier production, this tape was originally 
 intended for urban planners and bicycle enthusiasts. Now, however, the 
 filmmakers have found that others who've never seen nor heard from Cubans 
 outside of the dominant political debates are interested in this 
 off-the-beaten-path view of Cuba's cityscape.        (We aren't blocking 
 traffic,) We  Are Traffic!  A Movie about Critical Mass  1999  50 minutes  
 Directed by Ted White      We Are Traffic!  chronicles the history and 
 development of the "Critical Mass" bicycle movement, one of the most 
 spirited and dynamic social/political movements of the apathetic 90's.  In 
 over 100 cities in 14 different countries,   Critical Mass has now become a 
 monthly ritual of reclaiming the streets by bicycle activists riding en 
 masse.     With traffic congestion, pollution, and road rage on the rise, 
 growing numbers around the world are advocating for transportation 
 alternatives, and Critical Mass is at the cutting edge of this mindset.     
 We Are Traffic! tracks this leaderless, grassroots movement from its 
 beginnings in San Francisco in 1992 to its spread across the globe. With a 
 radical direct-action approach the participants of Critical Mass are 
 celebrating the bicycle and in turn taking on perhaps the century's most 
 sacred cow: the automobile.        The Greening Of Cuba  1996  38 minutes  
 Institute for Food and Development Policy, Subterranean Distribution     
 This video profiles Cuban farmers and scientists working to reinvent a 
 sustainable agriculture, based on ecological principles and local knowledge 
 rather than imported agricultural inputs. In their quest for 
 self-sufficiency, Cubans combine time-tested traditional methods with 
 cutting edge bio-technology.     When trade relations with the socialist 
 bloc collapsed in 1990, Cuba lost 80% of its pesticide and fertilizer 
 imports and half its petroleum - the mainstays of its highly industrialized 
 agriculture. Challenged with growing food for 11 million in the face of the 
 continuing U.S. embargo, Cuba embarked on the largest conversion to organic 
 farming every attempted.     Told in the voices of the women and men - the 
 campesinos, researchers, and organic gardeners - who are leading the 
 organic agriculture movement, the video reminds us that developed and 
 developing nations alike can choose a healthier environment and still feed 
 their people. (In Spanish with English sub-titles.)        The Global 
 Banquet: The Politics of Food  Producer/Director(s): Anne Macksoud, John 
 Ankele   57 Minutes     The Global Banquet reveals the profound negative 
 impact of globalization on our food system. Taking examples from all over 
 the world this video makes “difficult” issues understandable to the 
 non-specialist, by exposing the underlying myths that hunger is the result 
 of scarcity, that small countries simply can’t feed themselves, and that 
 only market driven, chemically based, industrial agriculture can feed the 
 world, how Agri-business is squeezing out small farmers and how trade 
 liberalization, by allowing mass produced, low-cost food exports to 
 developing countries is destroying peoples’ ability to feed themselves    
                                       Fed Up!   Wholesome Goodness 
 Productions  2002  57:40     Using hilarious and disturbing archival 
 footage (from archive.org) and featuring interviews with farmers, 
 scientists, government officials and activists, FED UP! presents an 
 entertaining, informative and compelling overview of our current food 
 production system from the Green Revolution to the Biotech Revolution and 
 what we can do about it. FED UP! explores the unintentional effects of 
 pesticides, the resistance of biotechnology companies to food labeling and 
 the links between government officials and major biotechnology and chemical 
 companies. FED UP! answers many questions regarding genetic engineering, 
 the Green Revolution, genetic pollution and modern pesticides through 
 interviews with Marc Lappé and Britt Bailey from the Center for Ethics and 
 Toxics, Peter Rosset and Anuradha Mittal from Food First, Vandana Shiva 
 from the Research Center for Science, Technology and Ecology, Ignacio 
 Chapela from UC Berkeley's Department of Environmental Science, Policy and 
 Management, Martina McGloughlin, Director of UC Davis' Biotechnology 
 Program and many others.               \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/06/01/40183.php
SUMMARY:Reclaim the Commons Benefit Film Festival
LOCATION:New College of California
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/06/01/40183.php
DTSTART:20040606T210000Z
DTEND:20040607T030000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
