Monday, December 07, 2009

AIFF 2009 - Prodigal Sons (Wow!)

I'd more or less decided to go to see Adopt a Sailor after Birthday.  But I hadn't counted on the fact that the filmmakers (director and co-producer/lead actor) were there and would talk about the film using up all the spare time we had to get to Out North. (That's not a complaint, just an explanation why we didn't go to Adopt a Sailor which started at 7:45,  Prodigal Sons didn't start until 8.)  I'll talk about Birthday in the next post.  Right now I'm waiting for the video of their after film discussion to download from the camera. 

But all that is preface to our decision to follow our friend C over to the Alaska Experience Theater to see Prodigal Sons.  When I quickly copied from the description earlier today, I did wonder why it was Prodigal Sons since it was about a daughter returning to her high school reunion in Montana.  I should have read the whole description. 

We were a few minutes late, but it quickly became clear that the daughter, Kim, had left this town as a son, Paul, years earlier and this was her first trip home as Kim.  It took me a while to unravel the other relationships (and since very few of you are likely to ever see the movie, I'll take the liberty to discuss more about the story than I normally would, BUT it does play again on Saturday at 1pm at the Alaska Experience theater and it was a really interesting story.  So, if you think you might go, and you should, stop now, and read this later.) Actually, knowing all this doesn't matter.  It's just the skeleton.  The film itself fills in the flesh. 

So I sit back thinking ok, this is going to be about this transgender woman dealing with the people from her life as a male.  The friends at the reunion seemed to be accepting. (She was the high school football quarterback.)  But, of course, that's just me trying to label it, compartmentalize it, and move on to other things.  It soon becomes clear that there are a lot more identity issues.  Younger brother, Todd, came out in high school, but it seems he still has some issues with the third brother Mark. 

Mark, who was adopted and who had a severe head injury in a car crash at 21, has to deal with the different identities that reside inside his damaged brain, trying to ressurrect the Mark that died in the crash by living in the past when that Mark was still alive, and warding off the newer, violent Mark with meds he hates to take. There are the identity issues from not knowing his birth parents and why he can play the piano beautifully, but can't read a note.  All this on top of normal adult sibling reconciliation challenges.  There's also Mom.  Lucky Dad has already passed away.  No, these are all good people, and Dad's presence may well have helped.   

There's a lot here in this documentary to mess with everyone's ideas of normal and abnormal and to tear holes of doubts in our well constructed stereotypes.  And to raise questions about our own unanswered issues.  Good stuff.  

Kimberly Reed, you made a really outstanding film.  This is one more amazing movie in town because Tony Sheppard and some others decided Anchorage needed a film festival.  People are filling up the venues.  50% full for an 'obscure' documentary on a Monday night is pretty good I'd say.   The Bear Tooth was pretty much full for Birthday and we walked past a long line of folks waiting to see Paddle to Seattle. 

AIFF 2009 - Monday Recommendations

We have a lot less to choose from today - just two slots at three venues - but we still have to choose.

I'm headed to the Bear Tooth for the 5:30 World Premiere of Birthday.  The Australian director is scheduled be there.  This is a feature film that I haven't seen, but the ADN did a review today.  I try not to read those reviews because they usually tell the whole story.  I'd rather learn it from the movie itself.

The other options at the early slot are From Somewhere to Nowhere.  This too looks like an interesting film - a documentary about migrant workers in China.  The documentaries give us windows into worlds we often know little about and I'm sure this one will give an atypical view of China.  I remember the migrant worker housing at People's University where I taught for 3 months in 2004.  It was pretty sketchy.  And my students, it turned out, never talked to the migrant workers, even though they shared the same campus, though they were there for very different reasons and they passed each other often.  This one is 5:45 at the Alaska Experience Theater. 


Then, there's Allusions/Delusions, one of the Shorts programs.  This one includes two that are shorts in competition - The Capgrass Tide and Free Lunch.  Capgrass has some Alaska like landscapes - particularly the mudflats where people go clamming, and sometimes don't come back.  The production values of this short, tight story are terrific.  Free Lunch is about a rich kid in LA who rejects the family to run a lunch wagon in the poor sections of LA.  I found that in the other shorts programs  the other films turned out to all be quite good.  I'm tempted to go see this program too.  At Out North at 5:30.

Then I'm still undecided about whether I stay at the Bear Tooth for the 8:15 Paddle to Seattle - what looks to be a good kayak movie; head to Out North for Adopt a Sailor,  a feature about New York couple that take in a sailor during fleet week at 7:45pm (Birthday's 104 minutes, so I should have enough time); or head for the Alaska Experience Theater to see Prodigal Sons, about a woman going to her high school reunion in Montana at 8:00pm.

I'm leaning toward Sailor, but we'll see.

What is Copenhagen?

1. Copenhagen is the capital of Denmark.
2. Copenhagen is a Tony Award winning play by Michael Frayn, based around an event that occurred in Copenhagen in 1941, a meeting between the physicists Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg.  (From Wikipedia,)
3.  Copenhagen is the United Nations Climate Change Conference being held in the city of Copenhagen beginning today. 

You have probably heard the word "Copenhagen" a lot lately.  I first heard it being used in the third context last April at the Indigenous People's Summit on Climate Change here in Anchorage.  I had three days then to get a sense of what it was about.  So, here's a brief primer to get you started finding out more.  This will probably have a lot more impact on all of our futures than say, the Super Bowl, even if we aren't watching it live on television.  You can, however, watch webcasts.  


The host country's official website:



The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Website




Who or What is the UNFCC?  From the UNFCC website:

Bodies of the Framework Convention, Actors in the Negotiation Process, and the UNFCCC secretariat

Bodies of the Convention and partner agencies
* The Conference of the Parties (COP) is the prime authority of the Convention. It is an association of all member countries (or "Parties") and usually meets annually for a period of two weeks. These sessions are attended by several thousand government delegates, observer organizations, and journalists. The Conference of the Parties evaluates the status of climate change and the effectiveness of the treaty. It examines the activities of member countries, particularly by reviewing national communications and emissions inventories; it considers new scientific findings; and it tries to capitalize on experience as efforts to address climate change proceed.
* A Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA) counsels the Conference of the Parties on matters of climate, the environment, technology, and method. It meets twice a year.
* A Subsidiary Body for Implementation (SBI) helps review how the Convention is being applied, for example by analyzing the national communications submitted by member countries. It also deals with financial and administrative matters. The SBI meets twice each year.
* Several expert groups exist under the Convention. A Consultative Group of Experts (CGE) on National Communications from "non-Annex 1 Parties" helps developing countries prepare national reports on climate change issues. A Least Developed Country Expert Group (LEG) advises such nations on establishing programmes for adapting to climate change. And an Expert Group on Technology Transfer (EGTT) seeks to spur the sharing of technology with less-advanced nations.
Partner agencies include the Global Environment Facility (GEF), which has existed since 1991 to fund projects in developing countries that will have global environmental benefits. The job of channeling grants and loans to poor countries to help them address climate change, as called for by the Convention, has been delegated to the GEF because of its established expertise. And the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) provides services to the Convention, although it is not part of it, through publishing comprehensive reviews every five years of the status of climate change and climate-change science, along with special reports and technical papers on request (see the section on the IPCC under "Climate Change Science.")

Actors in the negotiation process

* Countries belonging to the Convention hold the real power -- they take decisions at sessions of the Conference of the Parties (most decisions are reached by consensus). Member countries often form alliances to increase efficiency and maximize influence during negotiations. The Conference has several groupings representing the concerns of developing countries, least-developed countries, small-island states, Europe (through the European Union), non-European industrialized nations, oil-exporting nations, and nations committed to "environmental integrity."
Countries get extensive input from other sources, both through official channels and in behind-the-scenes chatter. This is not surprising, considering that the global climate is facing a major threat, coastlines and even countries may disappear, and industries and livelihoods may wax or wane. . . not to mention that millions of dollars are being allocated for programmes and activities.
* "Observer" is the official -- and misleadlingly quiet-sounding -- term for groups and agencies allowed to attend and even speak at international meetings, but not to participate in decision-making. Among observers permitted by the Convention are intergovernmental agencies, such as the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the World Meteorological Organization (WMO); the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD); the International Energy Agency; and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC). To date, over 50 intergovernmental agencies and international organizations attend sessions of the Conference of Parties.
* Observers also include a lively crowd of non-governmental organizations, known as "NGOs." These represent business and industrial interests, environmental groups, local governments, research and academic institutes, religious bodies, labour organizations, and population groups such as indigenous peoples. To win accreditation as observers, NGOs must be legally constituted not-for-profit entities "competent in matters related to the Convention." Currently, more than 600 NGOs are accredited to participate in meetings related to the Convention.

The UNFCCC Secretariat
* A secretariat staffed by international civil servants supports the Convention and its supporting bodies. It makes practical arrangements for meetings, compiles and distributes statistics and information, and assists member countries in meeting their commitments under the Convention. The secretariat is based in Bonn, Germany.

Alaska's role in the Conference.  I'm stepping out on limb here, because I'm not at all sure how many Alaskans are taking part and in what capacities.  So I'll just list what I know and any readers who know more can comment.

Indigenous People's Global Summit on Climate Change (link goes to this blog's coverage of the Summit) - was held in Anchorage last April.  That conference brought together representatives of Indigenous peoples from around the world to give direct testimony on how climate change is affecting their ways of life and to prepare for Copenhagen. 

The Summit's website gives a better description and has a link to their declaration (link goes to pdf file):
The Inuit Circumpolar Council hosted April 20-24, 2009 in Anchorage, Alaska a Global Summit on Climate Change that brought together indigenous delegates and observers.

The purpose of the summit was to enable Indigenous peoples from all regions of the globe to exchange their knowledge and experience in adapting to the impacts of climate change, and to develop key messages and recommendations to be articulated to the world at the Conference of Parties (COP) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in Copenhagen, Denmark in December 2009.

Indigenous Peoples from all regions of the world depend upon the natural environment.Their rich and detailed traditional knowledge reflects and embodies a cultural and spiritual relationship with the land, ocean and wildlife.

However, human activity is changing the world’s climate and altering the natural environment to which Indigenous Peoples are so closely attached and on which they so heavily rely.

In a very real sense, therefore, Indigenous Peoples are on the front lines of climate change. They observe climate and environmental changes first-hand and use traditional knowledge and survival skills to adapt to these changes as they occur.  Moreover, they must do so at a time when their cultures and livelihoods are already undergoing significant changes due, in part, to the accelerated development of natural resources from their traditional territories stimulated by trade liberalization and globalization.

Reflecting their position as “stewards” of the environment and drawing upon their age-old traditional knowledge—the heart of their cultural resilience—Indigenous Peoples were among the first groups to call upon national governments, transnational corporations and civil society to do more to protect the Earth and human society from climate change.
Indigenous delegates were selected from each of the UNPFII regions, with a view to ensuring balanced representation of professional expertise, gender balance and stakeholder participation within the available funds. Additional participants include both indigenous representatives and observers, who were interested in attending the Summit and were able to fund their own costs.
The United Nations University (UNU)  assisted the Summit in synthesizing relevant background information and providing logistical and media support. During the Summit, UNU provided substantive assistance in the form of rapporteuring, writing reports and proceedings, and aiding the Summit organizers with auditing procedures.
 APRN reported on some Alaskans going to Copenhagen including students from UAF's Rural Development Program; Patricia Cochran, the head of the Alaska Native Science Commission and coordinator of the Indigenous Peoples Summit; as well as Larry Hartig, Alaska's Commissioner of Environmental Conservation.  You can listen to the APRN piece here.

And, of course, you can follow blogs and twitter.

AIFF 2009 - Mount St. Elias (Audience Reactions) and Tapped

 Mount St. Elias tells the story of climbing up, then skiing down  Mount St. Elias, the second highest peak in the United States (and Canada - it's on the border) at 18,008 feet (5,488 meters).  However, because it is so close to the sea, it is the highest vertical mountain in the world from bottom to top with snow most of the way.  This led the mountaineers to the goal of climbing to the top and skiing down.  Actually, part of the ski trip was done earlier from the base camp.  The rest done from the peak to that base camp six or seven weeks later.  Here's what some of the audience thought:



This was my second documentary of the day.  It was testosterone heavy.  We kept hearing phrases like "testing myself,"  "proving to myself and to the world," and  "any misstep would be fatal."  This was about seriously goal-oriented men who took enormous risks to achieve their goal.  I think that people should do what they do well.  But I've also learned that people who become obsessive - workaholics, for example - are often using their obsession to avoid dealing with other parts of their lives.  These men were driven.  And obviously skilled skiers.  But was something missing in their personal lives that risking those lives in such a punishing environment was so attractive? 

And I couldn't help think about the people in "Tapped" the movie I'd seen in the earlier in the afternoon, who were fighting what politically seems equal odds - against Nestle's, Coca Cola, Pepsi - who bottle water -  and the petroleum industry that makes the plastic bottles.  It was hard to go to a documentary that I knew would be telling me about the problems of bottled water.  It's not that I disagree, but did I really want to sit through that?  Fortunately, none of the other venues had a must-see film.


[photo - cleaning the Bear Tooth theater between films]



It turns out I did want to see this movie, though the big screen is really close in the Alaska Experience Theater.  The film was well done.

I think Alaska would be significantly better off if the people who went to Mount St. Elias had also gone to Tapped.  In the same amount of time, they would have learned a lot about the negative impacts of buying bottled water.  I covered the details in an earlier post - also with audience comments. (And two of the Tapped commenters certainly aren't wimps - they met working in Antarctica.)


In Tapped, people were working hard for the public benefit.  In Mount St. Elias, people were working equally hard, but focused on very personal goals.  I think we all have to deal with figuring out who we are as individuals before we can reach out to help others.  And some of the people in Tapped also articulated personal events - a sister's cancer death in one case - that made them so tenacious in their fight for clean air, the right to water (and preventing privatization of water supplies), and the end to plastic bottles.

Both films showed people giving their all to meet their goals, it's just that the goals were so different. 

Homeboyski has several posts on the mountain and the film.

Sunday, December 06, 2009

AIFF 2009 - Tapped, Audience Reactions

Tapped is one of those documentaries that everyone should see, but I really didn’t want to go be taught the evils of bottled water.  For one thing, I thought I knew the subject pretty well.  Second, a good feature movie would be more entertaining.  But I did the ‘right’ thing and went to the Alaska Experience Theater.  Wow.  This is a movie that should be played in all schools.  Sure, it’s an advocacy movie for the anit-bottled water folks, but as the movie makes clear, the bottled water industry makes billions a year and posts very rosy, misleading advertising about bottled water that all kids and adults see over and over again. 

Basic parts of the movie:
  • Bottled water trying to get control over public water sources and when there are droughts, they still bottle water while townspeople have to cut back.
  • Bottled water is largely unregulated and their claims to be ‘safe’ and ‘pure’ suggest that tap water isn’t.  But in truth, tap water is much more regulated than bottled water.
  • Bottled water has lots of chemicals that come from the plastic that the FDA is not protecting us from.
  • Plastic bottles are a major environmental scourge in the land fills and the oceans.
  • Making plastic bottles is a huge environmental health issues near the factories.

Here are a few comments from people who saw it:


One Day in Cochin was not a great movie, but turned out better than I expected from the trailer.

At the Bear Tooth now after dropping J at home, she has a book club meeting tonight.  Getting ready for Mount St. Elias.  The place is packed.

AIFF 2009 - Sunday Films, What To Do?

I can't decide either.  I think I spent too much time looking at this that I'm overloaded.  I do have a warning for folks.  I did get a sneak preview of Godspeed which plays tonight at Bear Tooth.  It was made in Anchorage and Wasilla, and it is always nice (because it's so rare) to see our own landscapes on the big screen.  However, if you don't like graphic scenes of someone getting his skull smashed in with a rock I'd advise checking out the other venues at that time. 


Shadow Billionaire is a documentary about one of the founders of HDL who moves to Saipan and lives, apparently, a dissolute life.  If you are interested in understanding the problem of human trafficking for prostitution, this is one of several films that deal with that subject.  I've only seen the trailer, but it is one of the documentaries in competition.  7:45pm tonight (Sunday) at the Alaska Experience Theater 1.

Helter Skelter - 8:15 at at Out North is a mix of 'live action' (actors) and animation shorts.

I need to quit here so I can get to one of the 1pm movies.  I haven't decided between Adopt a Sailor (a feature about a couple that take in a sailor) at the Bear Tooth and Tapped, a documentary on bottled water at Alaska Experience.

Check the program guide for what else is on today.  Sundays are big days. 

Mount St Elias at 5:30 at the Bear Tooth should be a biggie.  About a mountain climbing accident a couple of years ago. 

AIFF 2009 - Paul Cotter's Bomber


I saw Bomber last night and haven't yet had time to distill why I liked it. I'm already in a bit of film overload.  My brain is like the airport over Christmas break. I'll try to do something more coherent on Bomber later, but meanwhile here are some initial thoughts and much better yet, about ten minutes of Paul Cotter himself answering questions after the showing.



I was hearing good things about Bomber, but wasn't able to get a sneak preview, so Saturday night was it, because it was the only showing.

A British adult ends up taking his parents to Germany, a trip his father wanted to take to a town he bombed in World War II.

This film, made for about $30,000.  Yes. four zeroes.  At that price a seriously flawed movie could score fairly well on my quality/$ scale.  But this is a film that is as good or better than most of the ones I see over a year.

It's a serious, funny movie about parent/child and husband/wife relationships.  It's funny because I suspect that most everyone in the audience over 20 could relate to one or more of the roles in the film and because you have to laugh because otherwise it hurts because he's put truths about your own life up on the big screen.

I'd been watching films since 1pm this afternoon and this was a 7:45 pm movie.  But it went by pretty quickly.  As I said above, I'll try to get something more coherent up.  It's clear that doing the videos takes enough time that I rationalize I don't have time to write.  But I also need some time to process what I've seen to write something worth more than, it's good or not.

AIFF 2009 - Francine Lastufka Taylor Recommends Neshoba

At the animation workshop Saturday afternoon, Francine Lastufka Taylor, who's the founder of the Alaska Moving Image Preservation Association (AMIPA), told me she'd been to a great documentary at 1pm.  The movie was Neshoba which will play again

Saturday, Dec. 12, at the Alaska Experience Theater at 5:30 pm

The movie is about the three civil rights workers who were killed in the 60s, the recent trial of one of the murderers, and the fact that the others are still around but no one is talking.  So I asked Francine to tell you herself.




AIFF 2009 - Devi Snively, Director of Death in Charge

Here's a brief conversation with Devi after the showing of her film "Death in Charge."  All the films in the Humoresque program were solid, interesting, well made films.  Death in Charge explored the relationship between a young girl and her mom with the help of the grim reaper and some macaroni and cheese. 

Saturday, December 05, 2009

AIFF 2009 - Busy Day with Animation and Shorts


A quick check in.  Humoresque was a program of shorts - all of which were quite good.  Definitely worthwhile.  Then the animation workshop, then the animation package.  The internet connection at Out North wasn't working, and so now I'm just posting quickly here at Bear Tooth before watching Bomber.  The director Paul is talking now before the film. 

That's Devi Snively whose short film, Death in Charge played in the 1pm showing at Out North.  We did a quick video afterward, and I'll get that up later.