An evening of live music, animated films, education, and action to reduce pesticides in Calgary!
Music by Anne Loree, Widow Maker, The Micel and Original Medecine, and Lorrie Matheson.
Political Action Blitz
Calgary City Council is currently considering a bylaw. Contact your alderman to support phasing out cosmetic pesticide use in Calgary.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008 6:30 pm
Tickets $10 (%100 C$) @ door. Plaza Theatre 1133 Kensington Rd. NW
Act now for a Pesticide Phase Out Bylaw! www.healthycalgary.ca
Sponsored by Coalition for a Healthy Calgary, The Arusha Centre, CJSW, Alberta Views, Industry Images, Sierra Club - Chinook Chapter.
Wednesday, May 21, 6:30 pm
Speak Out Festival Kick Off
Screening of
"This Beggar’s Description"
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Speak Out Festival Kick Off
A night of film, performance and celebration
6:30 PM to 9:00 PM
Plaza Theatre 1133 Kensington Rd. NW
donations at the door - suggested $10.00 C$ accepted
Screening of This Beggar’s Description, an arty NFB documentary about Philip Tétrault, a talented writer who, suffering from schizophrenia, has been locked up in jails and psych wards, kicked out of the house by desperate friends and family and spent long periods living on the streets of Montreal. Philip survives this mental illness and publishes his poetry. Leonard Cohen, who appears in the film, has his songs woven throughout. In this powerful and moving portrait, we are reminded that rather than continuing to isolate those with schizophrenia, it is a far richer experience to make a place for them.(PG) 65 minutes 2005 http://www.nfb.ca/collection/films
The evening also features live performances by:
Julie McNamara(UK) www.juliemc.com/pig-tales.html
MOMO Dance (AB) www.momodancetheatre.org/
Disability Action Hall (AB) www.actionhall.ca/actionhall/
Wednesday, April 16: Arusha's Co-production with the Calgary Underground Film Festival, 2008
Wednesday, March 19: The Garbage Warrior
The surprise hit documentary, directed by Oliver Hodges, chronicles the life of crazed New Mexican architect Michael Reynolds. As a champion of “radically sustainable” architecture, Reynolds has been a maverick on a mission for decades, and has suffered for his vision. Reynolds builds “earth ship” houses around the world, a powerful story delivered in a witty, gonzo style.
One Night!
Wednesday, March 19
6:00 pm Matt Masters and the Gentlemen of the Rodeo
7:00 pm Film
Plaza Theatre - Kensington
$10. films.arusha.org
Film Trailer at: garbagewarrior.com
Winner of the Audience Award: Vancouver International Film Festival
Thanks to FFWD for prize sponsorship and support
Feb. 20, 2008: A Stone's Throw, Film and Panel -
Is it okay to break the law for social justice?
Band at 6 pm, Film at 6:30, followed by discussion
Plaza Theatre - 1133 Kensington Road NW
$10 at the door, 100% C$ accepted
270-3200
*This event features the film, a discussion panel and the local band Monkeys on Typewriters starting at 6 PM. See details below.
This film is a love story that also tackles a serious subject. Shot in beautiful Nova Scotia, while resonating deeply with Albertans, it addresses both human drama and the bigger world of enviro-activism. Rated G.
“Inserting a strong pro-environment message into a family drama is a risky proposition, but Toronto’s Camelia Frieberg gets the balance right ... Stone’s Throw is a welcome sign that environmental concerns need not be consigned to the realm of documentary film”
- Peter Howell, Toronto Star
Our panel includes:
Allison Russell, LLB Courtney Sebree Arbo
Gordon Christie, Calgary District Labour Council
Mike Hudema, GreenPeace
Have Your Say
What is the most creative, legal, way you know to make social or environmental change happen?
Are there situations where you would feel breaking the law is justified?
Email your responses to arusha@arusha.org and you could win a prize!
Nov. 21, 2007:WalTown Screening, Dr. Dean Neu, Bill Moore-Kilgannon, and the Revolutionary Choir
Santa and his elves will be onsite giving out Buy Nothing Christmas cards and the Revolutionary Choir will host a sing-along with a live band. Watch the show!
Dr. Dean Neu, Director for the Centre for Public Interest Accounting and organizer of Just Shirts will speak on a Central American women's cooperative that is taking on sweatshops and producing inspiring clothing
Bill Moore-Kilgannon, Public Interest Alberta: “Living wages” are key to a just and sustainable future for Alberta. Bill Moore-Kilgannon will discuss Alberta’s living wage campaign and why it’s central to the economy.
Wednesday, November 21, 6pm, film at 7pm.
Donation only $10, (100% C$) at the Door
Plaza Theatre, 1133 Kensington Road NW 270-3200, films.arusha.org
PART OF FAIR TRADE WEEK 2007 ucalgary.ca/fairtrade
Sponsors: Public Interest Alberta, Haymarket Collective, Manana Imports, Live Green, Calgary! Take Action Grants, Great Forest Lawn Carsharing, , Buy Nothing Day, Calgary District Labour Council, Calgary Dollars, , Centre for Public Interest Acounting, UofC, Industry Images, , NoSweatCoalition, NFB
Oct. 17, 2007:Getting a Little ... Action
Lessons from a 7' Penis, We're Talking Vulva, and a performance by Consonant C
The Plaza Theatre, 1133 Kensington Road NW
$10.00 at the door, Calgary Dollars accepted
6 pm pre-show music by Consonant C, 7 pm performance
Adults Only Show
Featuring acclaimed Montréal actor and sex advocate, Norman Nawrocki, who brings his hilarious & provocative, one-man stand up ‘sex’ comedy presentation: ‘LESSONS FROM A 7ft PENIS’
In 'LESSONS FROM A 7 ft PENIS,' Nawrocki uses lots of non-homophobic and non-sexist humour to address common myths & preconceptions about sexuality. He tackles issues around safe sex, sexual anatomy, sex toys, gay/straight/bi sex, and offers insights, facts and options for healthier, happier, more exciting sex. Rib-tickling and informative, 'LESSONS FROM A 7ft PENIS’ is packed with practical tips. Nawrocki guarantees that anyone watching ‘will become a better lover.’ The shows have played to packed venues, standing ovations, & great reviews across Canada & the USA. Since 1993, hundreds of thousands of people have seen the shows and heard his powerful messages about date rape, sexual harassment, violence against women, gays and lesbians, homophobia, safe sex, and more.
Also screening, a 5 minute video: We’re Talking Vulva
A gleeful wear-and-care manual for anyone interested in “down there.”
Produced and directed by Shawna Dempsey and Tracy Traeger. Written and art directed by Shawna Dempsey and Lorri Millan. Part of the NFB Five Feminist Minutes 1990. Winner of the 1993 Blizzard award for best rock video
6pm performance by Consonant C "the musical equivalent of pressed flowers between diary pages"
Drawn together by love and a desire to make good music, The Consonant C is committed to creating interesting and inspiring experiences for their audiences. With two albums and a West Coast tour completed after less than two years of playing together, they have also proved themselves to be an uncommonly driven bunch.
Their lastest album, -Capes and Crowns- is available now!
myspace.com/theconsonantc
Sept. 19, 2007:Super Amigos and Municipal Election Super Hero Contest
Plaze Theatre, Kensington Road
The $500.00 cash prize was awarded at the Arusha Happy Hour, 5-7 pm, Friday, September 28 at the Arusha Info-Active Resource Centre in the Old Y Community Building , 223 - 12 Ave SW.
Dandi and the Lady Win the Super Hero Contest!
Dandi and the Lady
These superheroes may be small but they are extremely powerful in their fight to rid this city of an evil pollutant; pesticides! The Lady(bug) is dressed in POWER RED and stealth black.! Her brilliantly attired sidekick Dandi(lion), all in green and yellow- too bold! The frill of petals surrounding her face really accentuates her newly regained health, and youth, thanks to the Lady! Dandy's neighbors kept spraying [gasp] herbicide on their grass and Dandy couldn't breathe and had to always use her gas mask- how fashion backward?!!! Then one day, along came the Lady, to destroy city hall's inertia! One stroke and Calgary's health is restored!
Red Tape Power Suitor
Fighting her way through the red tape of City Hall to make sure festivals are staged
without the layers of bureaucracy and bs. Jumping through hoops to make art and culture a priority! All while flirting outrageously with her suitors, since she knows they hold the power. Dressed in power red from head to toe but disguised to protect her identity lest the red tape get deeper and the hoops get higher.
Captain Miracle Worker
Captain Miracle Worker is going to change the world by letting people have homes so people can able to afford to participate in society. She is going to wave her magic wand and everyone will be living in homes and have a lot of money. So there will be no more homelessness and poverty. She wears raggedy clothes but after she waves the magic wand she's wearing nice clothes. Anyone who tries to destroy Captain Miracle Worker will be sent to the devil.
Super Spud and Condi-mint
Super Spud is the almight community garden potatoe. Growing food in the city is critical to food security and reducing our energy consumption. By growing organically local, we save fossil fuel used for fertilizer,fuel, and refrigeration. By growing locally we celebrate our neighbourhoods and the food of our bioregion. Super Spuds side-kick Condi-mint flaunts the classic style of the slow-food movement with her full length black dress and patent boots. Eat local in style!
Super V Luchadora
Stand back as Super V waves her flag to mobilize citizens everywhere to elect the good guys into city hall. Fighting the 80% voter apathy rate of 2004 civic election with the use of her starred belt…Shoppers, coffee drinkers and video gamers are her prey. The waving of her cotton candy coloured cape has been known to turn beer warm as dejected hockey fans catch the wind. Her x-ray vision, thanks to an Aztec mask maker from Mexico City, has been able to turn the minds of the "no excusers" into the enlightened, "I've got nothing better to do anyway, I might as well vote". Are just a few words left in the wake of Super V's work. Pay special attention to pink bracelets which are inlaid with opal stone to signify the fire captured within the opal is to signify election date is October 15th. Her superfancy underpants also complete the signature move of the Voter V -, but beware the very apathetic, she has been known to use the deadly headlock or the double thigh buster move on the too smart/too cynical type. Her motto: 'Get off your ass!'
Feminestas!
Here to advocate, educate and lobby for gender equality. With our super powers we have the ability to change adversity into equality. We address the issues of wage inequality and paid work versus unpaid work; access to safe and affordable housing for single mothers; decriminalization of prostitution and harsher penalties for the traffickers and consumers of the sex trade; better education of reproductive rights and access to reproductive services; access to safe and affordable quality childcare; creating realistic and diversified representation of women in the media; stigma, victim blaming, and ineffective judicial processes regarding domestic violence. Our mission is to empower women so they are able to reach their full potential.
TransportUs
For those that fear the Low Income Transit "Pass" will become a thing of the "past". For those that support inclusionary zones with accessible transportation services to grant people full access to their social, political, economic, and BASIC community needs. For those that have to spend hours waiting for public transit, Access Calgary, or the Handibus to get around. For those that wonder, "How can a city so prosperous have a public transit system that remains inaccessible and unaffordable to those that depend on it the most?" Poor transportation infrastructure, along with low wages and lack of affordable housing is at the crux of poverty – for those who want an AFFORDABLE, ACCESSIBLE transit system and a truly inclusive city, fear not, TransportUs is here! (and by US, we mean YOU) TransportUs is a beam of fluorescence, day and night, snow or shine, to safely guide and ride with people throughout this city. She will gladly point you in the right direction if you ever get lost, cold, or feel unheard....
Anti-Sprawl Man
Calgary has the highest eco-logical footprint in North America. Shame! Shame! Anti-Sprawl Man stops urban sprawl in Calgary by putting a green belt around it to stop the growth that is only designed for cars not people. He creates municipalities in suburban areas to establish metropolitans. He is against sprawl because it is opposed to this culture of waste.
Bike Lane Super Girl
She creates bike lanes all throughout the downtown core and surrounding area. Her super power promotes using the bicycle in the inner city. The bike lanes she makes generates respect for cyclists and gives us the right of way; thus making cycling on the streets safe and peaceful. Bike Lane Signs on her wrists bands represent the bike lanes she creates with her super powers. With wings on her head and the sun on her belt to symbolize her angelic role in society.
Super Animal Liberator
She's the daughter of the Super Amigo, Super Animal, and wears the same gold and black outfit. She's here to remind us that vegetarianism is the future and all animals should be treated as equal inhabitants on the planet
Take That!
Alderman Joe Ceci gives Super Apathy a headlock, cheered on by Super V, the voting luchadora. The grudge match took place on nominations day for Calgary city council candidates, Monday Sept. 17. Calgary elections take place October 15.
July 18, 2007:Our Daily Bread
7-9 pm, Plaza Theatre (1133 Kensington Road NW)
Tickets $10 at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
Welcome to the world of industrial food production and high-tech farming! To the rhythm of conveyor belts and immense machines, the film looks without commenting into the places where food is produced in Europe: monumental spaces, surreal landscapes and bizarre sounds - a cool, industrial environment which leaves little space for individualism. People, animals, crops and machines play a supporting role in the logistics of this system which provides our society’s standard of living. OUR DAILY BREAD is a wide-screen cinematic tableau, a pure, meticulous and lush film experience that lets the audience form their own ideas. To the rhythm of conveyor belts and immense machines, the film looks into the places where food is produced; monumental spaces, surreal landscapes and bizarre sounds. Directed by Nikolaus Geyrhalter.
Sponsored by Spoon Fed Soup, Sunnyside Market and Industry Images.
Special thanks to Lonely Hunters for their energetic set. Get their new cd and listen at: www.myspace.com/garethsband
“Grand Prix” Festival International du Film d’Environnement Paris, ‘06 “EcoCamera Award” Rencontres internationales du documentaire de Montréal,’06 “Best Film” Ecocinema International Film Festival Athens, ‘06
June 15, 2007:The Yes Men
(LIVE, that’s right IN PERSON)
Thanks to Ours To Destroy for entertaining the audience before the show! Take a listen: ourstodestroy.com
Plaza Theatre (1133 Kensington Road NW)
Tickets $15 ($10 students) at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
Advance tickets available at Sunnyside Market (338–10 Street NW).
The Yes Men are globe-trotting theatre activists, famous for swapping Barbie/GI Joe voiceboxes and mocking the WTO on global television. They made their first visit to Calgary a splash on June 15. Their sold-out Arusha event was preceeded by a prank at a Calgary oil and gas trade show, where the YesMen masqueraded as ExxonMobil executives unveiling the newest biodiesel fuel, ... made from human remains!
Presented by The Arusha Centre with Calgary Animated Object Society and Movies That Matter (The EPCOR CENTRE, NUTV, CJSW and the Gauntlet).
Escape From Suburbia: Beyond the American Dream
The New Film by Gregory Greene, Director of The End of Suburbia
World Premiere! Two Nights Only in Calgary
Wednesday, May 16 & Thursday, May 17, 2007, 7pm
Plaza Theatre (1133 Kensington Road NW)
Tickets $10 at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
Advance tickets available at Sunnyside Market (270-7477. 10, 338–10 Street NW).
Alberta is at a crossroads. Newspaper headlines in Alberta tell of impending nuclear power, water crises, and environmental destruction. Meanwhile, proven solutions are not being implemented, a product of a province-wide democratic deficit.
The End of Suburbia, Gregory Greene's 2004 film, was the first to detail the dynamics of peak oil and the need for relocalization. The End of Suburbia became an independent success, winning film festival awards, returning generous revenue for its producer, and capturing attention from such media as Oprah, The Colbert Report, The New York Times, the Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star.
In Escape from Suburbia we meet three characters whose very different lives converge on a single note: creating a more sustainable future for their families and communities as Hummer fever begins to power down. Corporate and government solutions juxtapose what history and common sense tell us is beginning to happen: that we as a civilization are about to face one of the most significant events in human history, the overhaul of a lifestyle which is completely predicated on cheap and abundant oil.
Sponsors: Calgary Dollars, Public Interest Alberta, Carol Marcinowski-Alberta Ltd 545822, The City of Calgary - (Land Use Planning and Policy and Environmental and Safety Management), Sustainable Calgary, Broken City, FFWD, CKUA, CJSW, Industry Images, VUE, Calgary Carsharing Cooperative, City of Calgary Ecological Footprint Project, Clean Calgary, Natural Family Fair, Dr. David Swann, MLA and the Liberal Caucus, The Alberta Green Party and Industry Images..
Wednesday, April 18, 2007
Who Decides our Energy Future?
Plaza Theatre (1133 Kensington Road NW)
$10 at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
Who Decides our Energy Future? Advocating for a People’s Plan for Energy Decisions are being made about our energy future outside of Alberta. Participate in an interactive session, find out what Alberta groups are doing, and learn how you can get involved.
Tony Clarke is president and executive director of the Polaris Institute, which works with citizen movements to develop tools for democratic social change. He is the author of several books including: Global Showdown: How the New Activists Are Fighting Global Corporate Rule [2001]; and Blue Gold: The Battle Against the Corporate theft of the World’s Water [2002]. In 2005, he was co-recipient with Maude Barlow of the Right Livelihood Award, better known as the ‘alternative Nobel prize’.
Tyson Slocum joined Public Citizen’s in 2000 and is their Energy Director. Tyson researches the influence of corporate special interests on our political system and works to promote corporate & government accountability and sustainable energy. He has presented his findings before the U.S. Congress and appears regularly in radio, print, and television media. Public Citizen was founded by Ralph Nader in 1971.
Wednesday, March 21, 2007: Troubled Waters
Plaza Theatre (1133 Kensington Road NW)
$10 at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
Come participate in this interactive sesssion featuring environmental, political, social and artistic short films from across the country highlighting the importance of water. Celebrate the International Day of Water, March 22.
Sponsored by CitizenShift, Quickdraw Animation Society, The Council of Canadians, and KAIROS.
February 21, 2007: In the Gutter and Other Good Places
Plaza Theatre - YES, new location! (1133 Kensington Road NW)
$10 at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
In the Gutter and Other Good Places (1993, Shot in Calgary by Writer/Director/Producer Cristine Richey) is the powerful account of three Calgary men, Colin, Jean, and Ron who survive by "dumpster-diving" - collecting bottles out of refuse containers for cash. The film is a detailed and compassionate look at the choices and circumstances which have shaped their lives.
Challenging the conventional assumptions many of us may have about street people and how they got there, the film reveals that one of the characters, Ron, has a Masters in engineering science and that he gave up both his family and career at Gulf Oil because of alcoholism. Colin meanwhile, has access to a substantial inheritance and yet refuses to touch it, preferring to live on what he can collect from the dumpsters. Perhaps the film's most laudable feat is the trust with which the stories are told, bringing us closer to those who normally pass unseen.
Although this film is over 10 years old, the issues are still the same and number of homeless in Calgary has increased. We have scheduled a phone link up with The Partnership to End Homelessness in Chicago and NYC Department of Homeless Services to share information about their 10 year plan working with the issues of homelessness.
Co-sponsored by the Calgary Low Income Coalition.
January 24, 2007:
The World According to Sesame Street
Uptown Stage and Screen, 612 - 8 Avenue SW
$10 at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
Children's education is more than just ABCs and 123s. With today's global landscape dominated by pressing issues like poverty, human rights, AIDS and ethnic genocide, how can the world's most-watched children's television show bridge cultures while remaining socially relevant? THE WORLD ACCORDING TO SESAME STREET explores the dramas, challenges and complexities behind producing international versions of the beloved television program. The film follows productions in Bangladesh, Kosovo and South Africa and examines how producers from New York's Sesame Workshop take the iconic American television show and localize it with indigenous songs, puppets and curricula while facing cultural, political and production challenges.
When it first aired in 1969, Sesame Street was considered groundbreaking. A product of the era's progressive and civil rights movements, it boasted the first mixed-race cast and first urban setting on a children's television show. One of the program's goals was to help level the educational playing field for all pre-school children. Sesame Workshop's international co productions now illustrate the current political and social environments of their home countries. As fascinating primer on art, media and intercultural dialogue, THE WORLD ACCORDING TO SESAME STREET illustrates both the many cultural differences and similarities of producing the children's television program on a global level.
November 15, 2006:
Black Gold
Uptown Stage and Screen, 612 - 8 Avenue SW
$10 at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
"Wake up and smell the coffee with this probe into the global grind behind your indulgent latte... The film asks why just one or two cents of the $3 to $4 per cup Americans and Europeans pay for designer caffeine go to the bean farmers. As bracing as a double espresso..." - Toronto Star
"As coffee drinkers know, not all beans are equal, but the meaning of inequality gets an entirely different spin in Marc and Nick Francis' handsome and astute doc,
"Black Gold..... The Francises are aces behind the camera, displaying an elegant sense of composition that makes their subject visugorgeous score lends doc a grand quality."
Uptown Stage and Screen, 612 - 8 Avenue SW
$10 at the Door, Calgary Dollars Accepted
Robert Greenwald, as his feisty Brave
New Films studio did with "Wal-Mart," focuses on the true stories of victims of companies the likes of Halliburton, Blackwater, and many others who operate at tremendous profit with virtually no accountability in Iraq, either for insuring that our GIs receive appropriate and timely support.
Don't think this is an American issue! Alberta companies and those with Calgary offices are active and profitable in Iraq, Afghanistan and other war zones.
Come learn about Calgarian war profiteers and hear from Calgarians what the Iraq situation is actually like.
A documentary film by PeÅ Holmquist and Suzanne Khardalian, 2005. 73 min.
Her opponents call her "The Green Killer". They gave her "The Bullshit Award" for sustaining poverty. TIME says she is a hero of our times, an icon for youngsters all over the world.
The film is about Vandana Shiva, Indian environmental activist and nuclear physicist, who was awarded the Right Livelihood Award in 1993. It's a film on globalisation and patenting, on genetic engineering, bio-piracy, indigenous knowledge.
In this documentary, the filmmakers follow Vandana Shiva over a two-year period, from her organic farm at the foot of the Himalayas to institutions of power all over the world. Here Vandana Shiva does battle with one of her toughest opponents, Monsanto, a huge American biotech company, when they try to patent an ancient Indian strain of wheat. Together with Dalits she tries to close down a Coca-Cola plant in Kerala, in a conflict involving groundwater pollution. In this film Vandana Shiva also tackles the question of farmers' suicide, a backlash of the globalisation.
The filmmakers describe Monsanto from the inside and arrange what proves a shaking meeting between Vandana Shiva and Barun Mitra, liberal think-tank, lobbyist and fierce critic of Vandana Shiva - and the man who gave her the "Bullshit Prize".
August 16, 2006: Pills Profits Protest: Chronicle of the global AIDS movement
An up-to-the minute documentary about AIDS treatment activism. It examines the national and international grass roots demand for access to affordable treatment for 40 million people living with HIV, most of whom live in poor countries.
"This is one of the best films about AIDS I've ever seen. It's a moving portrait of the global struggle to expand treatment access for millions of poor people with HIV/AIDS, and underscores the critical role that grassroots activists are playing in forcing 'Big Pharma' and other powerful interests to adopt responsible AIDS policies."
—Dr. Paul Zeitz, Global AIDS Alliance
July 19, 2006: Rebel Music Americas
This is the music of the other America, the America of the South - popular, dynamic, rebellious and often... anti-American. It's the rhythms and voices of displaced communities in Columbia, of "los piqueteros" blocking access to a refinery in Buenos Aires, of indigenous Mexicans hunted down at the US border, of peasants staging vast land occupations in Brazil.
From Tierra del Fuego to the Rio Grande the
Americas ?are in turmoil, and in the midst of the social and political movements rocking the region are some amazing rebel musicians. They are well-informed and more than aware of their role in the world as pawns in global politics and economics. Four of them take centre stage in the feature-length documentary film Rebel Music Americas directed by Marie Boti and Malcolm Guy and produced by Lucie Pageau.
All About Darfur offers an opportunity to hear it explained by eloquent and diverse voices from within Sudan. The director talks to ordinary Sudanese in outdoor tea shops, markets, refugee camps and living rooms about how deeply rooted prejudices could suddenly burst into a wild fire of ethnic violence. How can war break out only two months after peace accords were signed between the ethnic groups in Darfur and the government in Khartoum.
"A highly personal documentary that is touching and illuminating."
-Jennie Punter, Toronto Globe and Mail
"A provocative and intelligent film."
-Henry Sheehan, President, Los Angeles Film Critics Association
Opening remarks from MLA Dr. David Swann. Cosponsored by Canada Democracy and International Law and The African Sudanese Association of Calgary.
Characterized by their environmentally friendly lifestyle, love of chaos and rejection of the automobile, the NYC Black Label Bicycle Club became a kind of impenetrable fortress for Howard, the filmmaker behind BIKE. Falling into drug and alcohol problems, Howard's quest to be accepted by the group becomes a central arc for the film.
"A bike is an elegant symbol of resistance to mainstream consumer culture. And even though it is a consumer item made by companies, it doesn't require any fuel or live off waste. It's sort of a pure symbol," says Jacob Septimus, the film's co-director.
"The tallbike riders of New York ride double frame bicycles six feet high, engage in punk rights of heraldry, ritualistically jousting each other on the night-shrouded streets of NYC. ... A stylishly directed leftist rant against big oil and consumer conformity..." Boxoffice Reviews.
"A documentary about something most of the world knows nothing about, a slice of sociology arrestingly filmed, daringly cut and vividly revealed." Five Stars, Orlando Sentinel.
Calgarians! This screening will be an opportunity to showcase your trick bikes.