DOC BC hosted a series of films that screened to our community which ranged from works in progress and completed films. We held these films to give filmmakers valuable feedback, or to showcase films that were produced by members, and to celebrate documentary in a great form – in public! We are currently on hiatus with this series but keep checking back for updates.
Category: Doc Screens
International Documentary Challenge
DOC SCREENS Screening of the best films from the last 3 years of the INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTARY CHALLENGE
The International Documentary Challenge is a fun and innovative competition that pushes filmmakers’ skills to the limit. If you’re new to the idea, it’s very simple: Filmmakers from around the world are given a genre (Character Study, Music, 1st Person, etc.) and a theme (such as “Change”.) Participants then have 5 days to develop, produce and edit a 4 to 7 minute non-fiction film. The top films, as determined by judges, premiere at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival in Toronto. The result is an exhilarating five days for the filmmakers, and, as the films reveal, a joy for the audiences at Hot Docs and beyond.
The International Documentary Challenge.
Real Life. Filmed Real Fast.
www.raw-canvas
Canyon War – the untold story
The Documentary Organization of BC, New Pathways to Gold Society and The Aboriginal Tourism Association of BC are proud to present a preview screening of BC filmmaker Eva Wunderman’s documentary “Canyon War – the untold story”.
Canyon War sheds light on a shadowy chapter in Canadian history. Rich gold discoveries in the Fraser River ignited a violent war between First Nations and tens of thousands of invading gold miners during the summer of 1858. Descendants of both sides of the war voyage the scenic Fraser Canyon to forgotten battlefields telling stories of villages in flames and American militias killing and looting.
The screening will be preceded by performances by Philip Davis and Cheryl Bear and followed by a reception.
RSVP is requested by May 25th at canyonwar@gmail.com
Seducing the Guard
Every human culture makes art. Something so universal must have a purpose – what biologists call survival value. Yet our culture has marginalized art as a luxury and commercialized it as entertainment. Are we losing something vital for our survival? Using interviews with some of the leading thinkers of our time, and artwork filmed on location in the world’s great museums, Seducing the Guard asks about the purpose of art and finds deep connections between art and science.
Interviewees include: Roger Guillemin, Nobel-laureate neuroscientist, painter; John Gray, writer; Elaine Pagels, scholar, author of “The Gnostic Gospels”; Daniel Dennett, philosopher, author; Jane Coop, concert pianist; Jean-Pierre Changeux, neuroscientist; Roald Hoffmann, Nobel-laureate chemist, poet; Paul Andre Fortier, choreographer; Jerome Friedman, Nobel-laureate physicist; Sal Ferreras, musician; Margaret Geller, astrophysicist; Steven Miller, author; Maria von Finckenstein, Curator of Inuit Art, Canadian Museum of Civilization; Russell Hulse, Nobel-laureate physicist; William Unruh, physicist; Roy Andersson, film director; and Steven Weinberg, Nobel-laureate physicist.
www.raw-canvas
The Insular Empire
A work-in-progress screening of a new PBS documentary by Vanessa Warheit. Presented as part of DOCScreens – a monthly event showing local documentaries and works-in-progress.
MEDIA RELEASE
– for immediate release-
DOC SCREENS: The Insular Empire A PBS Documentary Work-in-Progress About America’s Pacific Territories
Raw Canvas
1046 Hamilton, Vancouver, BC
January 21, 7:30pm
(Vancouver, January 16, 2009) – The Documentary Organization of Canada, BC chapter presents a rough-cut screening of The Insular Empire: America in the Marianas at Raw Canvas, 1046 Hamilton St., January 21 at 7:30 pm, as part of its DOC SCREENS
program featuring the work of BC documentary filmmakers.
Join producer/director/editor Vanessa Warheit and editor Laurie MacMillan for a special sneak preview of the latest film from Vancouver-based Horse Opera Productions. Seven years in the making, The Insular Empire is a PBS documentary about America’s Mariana Islands. Six thousand miles west of California, the Marianas are home to over 200,000 US citizens who do not share the same rights as their fellow Americans in the States.
What is it like to be a colonial subject of the ‘greatest democracy on Earth’? From the beaches of Guam to the White House, from the CIA to the Peace Corps, from beauty pageants to the UN, The Insular Empire takes us on a journey to discover what it really means to belong to America’s ‘insular empire’ in the Pacific. Ultimately, it is a story of loyalty and betrayal, about a patriotic indigenous people struggling to find their place within the American political family.
The film is supported in part by Pacific Islanders in Communications (part of the
PBS/CPB Minority Consortium), the Guam Humanities Council, the Pacific Pioneer
Fund, and the Northern Marianas Council for the Humanities.
Film’s total run time is 65 minutes. There will be a Q&A with the filmmakers after the
screening.
For more information and photos please contact:
Vanessa Warheit
604-628-0454
vanessa@horseopera.org
www.horseopera.org
theinsularempire.blogspot.com
Saving Luna
Carts of Darkness
DIRECTOR IN ATTENDANCE!
The treacherous mountain roads and discarded shopping carts of North Vancouver become the rivers and boats of self-exploration for a group of homeless “free birds” who have few chances at joy. Murray Siple’s documentary adopts the tropes of extreme sports filmmaking; fluid flowing cinematography, intense music, visceral pulse pounding action and irreverent characters unbounded by society’s constrictions, to bring viewers deep into a world and deep into people they would normally look away from.
Shot in stunning high-definition, and featuring the music of Vancouver bands such as Black Mountain and Ladyhawk, Carts of Darkness is a story of endurance that captures the risk and intensity of life lived on the very edge.
“Former snowboarder and filmmaker Murray Siple sets his sights on a group of bottle collectors in mountainous North Vancouver who take ordinary grocery carts laden with empties down some of the steepest hills in Western Canada. The result is a strange
mix of high-octane action, delicate social probing and charismatic characters that’s hard to ignore, and incredibly fun to watch.” Katherine Monk, Vancouver Sun.
Presented in co-operation with the National Film Board of Canada, DOC BC, and the Vancouver International Film Centre
ADDITIONAL SCREENINGS (admission for DOC members is not free on these days)
April 29, Tues: 9:15pm, May 1, Thurs: 7:30pm
Free for DOC members only
on Monday April 28, 7:30pm
Canada 2008 // Director:
Murray Siple // 63 min //
VANCITY THEATRE
Kathaumixw: A Thousand Voices, A Single Passion
KATHAUMIXW: A Thousand Voices, A Single Passion
Dynamic music and song celebrates the human spirit
June 4, 7:30 pm at the Vancity Theatre (1181 Seymor St. at Davie, Vancouver, BC)
Admission is free for DOC BC members and $9 for non-members.
PRODUCER AND DIRECTOR TONY PAPA WILL BE IN ATTENDANCE!
The Documentary Organization of Canada, BC chapter presents Kathaumixw: A Thousand Voices, A Single Passion, by
producer and director, Tony Papa, as part of DOC SCREENS , its new monthly screening series, which features the work
of its members, documentary filmmakers in British Columbia.
The film will be preceeded by a dynamic performance by Nettwerk recording artists Aliqua, http://www.aliqua.com/ as well
as Vancouver Choir, Enharmonium. This 70 minute feature Doc won “Best Overall Sound at the Leo’s last year and has
been touring the world to rave reviews.
Every second summer, choirs from around the world, converge on the edge of British Columbia’s coastal wilderness to
celebrate the splendor of their love for singing. KATHAUMIXW: A Thousand Voices, A Single Passion, directed by Gemini
Award winner Tony Papa interweaves the heart of the choral experience with explosive performance from international
choirs. Kathaumixw (pronounced Ka-thou-mew) is a local Coast Salish First Nations word meaning: “a gathering of
different peoples.” The film won a Leo Award for Best overall Sound, and has traveled the world through festival
screenings.
The film features the Taipei National University of the Arts Orchestra and Chorus; Powell River Academy Chamber Choir,
Canada; Christ the King Church Choir, Uganda; Aliqua, Canada; Guangdong Experimental Middle School Choir, China;
Taipei National University of the Arts Chorus, Taiwan; Adelaide Chamber Singers, Australia; Seycove Chamber Choir,
Canada; Coro de Camara de la Universidad Autonoma del Estado de Mexico, Mexico; Philippine Saringhimig Singers,
USA; and St. Margaret’s AGS, Australia.
DOC SCREENS will showcase the work of BC producers and directors and provide a forum for discussion and
presentation. Films will be long and short, commissioned or labours of love, very new (even works-in-progress that need
feedback) or older. DOC Screens will take place every month. Locations will vary, check www.docbc.org for details.
“The film is a celebration of the human spirit as expressed through music and song. We’re thrilled to share this wonderful
experience through this documentary,” said DOC BC co-chair, Julia Ivanova.
For more information and photos please contact:
Maia Iotzova maiavideo@yahoo.com
Julia Ivanova jivanova@shaw.ca
Children of Armageddon
The Documentary Organization of Canada, BC chapter presents the premiere screening of Children of Armageddon at the Vancity Theatre, September 3 at 7:30 pm as part of its DOC SCREENS program that features the work of BC documentary filmmakers.
Join Vancouver-based director, Fabienne Lips-Dumas, as she steers steadfastly into the wake of a nuclear legacy launched in Japan and stretching into the South Pacific, exploring the human side of a string of very unnatural disasters. With contributions of world-renowned experts Noam Chomsky, Hans Blix, Arjun Makhijani and Douglas Roche and others, Children of Armageddon is a passionate, deeply moving film which explores the legacy of nuclear arms around the world through the experiences of three young women and set against the backdrop of a potential nuclear renaissance.
The film was nominated for Best Documentary at the International Film Festival South Africa, an Official Selection at the Non Violence International Film Festival, and has been screened at the Kansas International Film Festival, the Globians Film Festival, the REEL EARTH Aotearoa Environmental Film Festival and the Hazel Wolf Environmental Film Festival. Children of Armageddon was produced by Vancouver’s Red Letter Films, one of a select few francophone production companies outside of Quebec and France.
Produced with the participation of Société Radio-Canada, and of the Réseau de l’Information (Radio-Canada), the Canadian Television Fund created by the Government of Canada and the Canadian Cable Industry, Rogers Documentary Fund, the Canadian Independent Film and Video Fund, The Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit, Province of British Columbia Film Incentive BC. Developed with the participation of British Columbia Film.
For more information and photos please contact:
Sylvie Peltier, (producer)
604-783-6317
speltier@redletterfilms.com
Fabienne Lips-Dumas (director)
fld@ultranet.ca