- - Established November 2008 - -

A chance to consider lives around us and amongst us, these once-a-month documentary nights are intended to help us look collectively at an issue through the lens of documentary film, and foster thoughtful post-film discussion in a judgment-free atmosphere.

Mine Your Own Business [NOVEMBER 2009]

The Dark Side of Environmentalism??? HUH???



Mine Your Own Business exposes the dark side of environmental initiatives by shining a light on the cozy image of environmentalists as well-meaning, harmless activists. Mine Your Own Business takes the question of what local people want for their future directly to those most affected by campaigns that actually keep people in poverty. This 2006 documentary is the first to ask hard questions of foreigners leading campaigns to "save" remote areas from development, and showcases answers that are often ignorant, and worse, disturbing. Please come check out this controversial film, and stay for what will no doubt be a lively discussion afterwards!

ABOUT THE FILM

Dark Days [OCTOBER 2009]



This film, which is quite literally groundbreaking, reveals a way of life unimaginable to most people... that of hundreds of homeless living deep underground in an abandoned New York City railroad tunnel. With homes built out of scrap metal, plastic, and plywood, they have created a commmunity that boasts electricity, furniture, and working kitchens, not to mention the comaraderie and support from each other. Some have lived in the tunnel for 25 years. British director Marc Singer's film, accompanied by a moving soundtrack from DJ Shadow, consists of candid conversations with tunnel residents, who are intelligent, funny, optimistic, and above all, human.

96% Tomatometer Rating

Children of Leningradsky & Invisible Children [SEPTEMBER 2009]



Since the fall of the Iron Curtain, an estimated four million children live on the streets in the former Soviet Union. In the streets of Moscow alone there are over 30,000. This film focuses on a community of homeless children living in the Moscow train station Leningradsky. AIDS, drug abuse, police brutality, and other social ills in post-Soviet Russia are recorded in this film, which was nominated for the 2004 Academy Award for Best Documentary, Short Subject. 33min. *Read Review*




In the spring of 2003, three young film-students traveled to Africa in search of a story. What started out as a filmmaking adventure transformed into much more when these Southern Californian boys discovered a tragedy that disgusted and inspired them, where children are both the weapons and the victims. This documentary exposes the tragic realities of northern Uganda’s night commuters and child soldiers, and has sparked a grassroots movement mobilizing thousands of American teens into action to raise money to rebuild war-torn schools in northern Uganda and provide scholarships to African youth. 55min.

The Boys of Baraka [AUGUST 2009]

This is the story of twenty children society has given up on, yet who refuse to give up on themselves. Twenty ‘at-risk’ 12-year-old boys from the tough streets of inner-city Baltimore travel to Kenya to attend an experimental boarding school located in Baraka. In the face of discipline and academic rigor, as well as safety they have never known before, for the first time they begin to plan optimistically for their own futures… despite the tremendous obstacles they face at home. The film, which captures their amazing journey to Africa as well as their return to Baltimore, shows how the boys fare when they are forced to return the difficult realities of their city.

Watch Preview, Read Reviews

RATED R

Black Gold [MAY 2009]

Fair Trade Film & Fondue Party
In an increasingly global economy, where the profit margins of huge multinational coffee companies continue to rise, prices paid for coffee harvests have reached an all-time low, forcing farmers in some of the world's poorest countries to abandon their once bountiful fields. Among the hardest hit by the devastating effects of this crisis are the coffee farmers of Ethiopia, the birthplace of coffee.

Read Reviews

Dreams Die Hard [APRIL 2009]

One of them wanted to earn money so she could treat her parents like a king and queen, two of them were enticed by the promise of a good education, another one wanted to buy medicine for his sick son; none of them ever dreamed they would become slaves in the United States.

Film Background

In addition to this short-length film, we will get to hear about two local organizations: the Women's Rape Crisis Center in Burlington, and a new local chapter of an organization committed to ending child slavery. Time permitting, we may also listen to readings of several testimonies from modern-day freed slaves. Should be a thought-provoking night.

Promises - The Children of Israel and Palestine [MARCH 2009]




In this alternative look at the Jewish-Palestinian conflict, seven Jewish and Palestinian children are followed for a period of three years, creating a statement more human than political about the effects of national hatred. Though they live only 20 minutes apart, the seven children exist in completely separate worlds; the physical, historical and emotional obstacles between them run deep. As these children tell their own story about growing up in Jerusalem, we see how insoluble the problems of the Middle East have become. The film also features an epilogue from 2004, several years after the film was nominated for the Oscar for Best Documentary. This epilogue speaks at times to their loss of innocence and to the beginning of their adulthood.

The Most Hated Family In America [JANUARY 2009]



Celebrated British documentarian Louis Theroux, son of author Paul Theroux (The Mosquito Coast), has spent years examining American subcultures from swingers to gamblers to hypnotists. For this hour-long doc, Theroux spent two weeks with the members of the Westboro Baptist Church in Kansas. All from the same family, the 75 members, led by Pastor Fred Phelps, earnestly spread their message of God's wrath by lofting signs that say "God Hates Fags," and picketing the funerals of American soldiers killed in Iraq…