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Films
at Other Worlds Are Breathing
A World At
War
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De
Stand van de Zon
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The
Eye of the Day
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Netherland,
2002, 94 min
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Director:
Leonard Retel Helmrich
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Producer:
Hetty Naaykens, Coöperatie
Scarabeefilms
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Director's
Contact: l.retel@planet.nl
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'De Stand van de
Zon' gives us a very close portrait of everyday
life of an ordinary Indonesian family in Jakarta:
Rumidja, her sons Bakti and Dwi and her friend Ibu
Sum. Not rich, not poor. This family has to deal
with the paucity of food in order to satisfy their
daily needs. In the city of Jakarta there is a
crisis. Because of the crisis the students and
population force President Suharto to step down.
The battle between the yellow party Golkar and the
red party PDI of Megawati reaches its peak during
the hilarious election ceremony in the Kampong.
Bakti feels excluded because he is not a Muslim
like the rest of his family. His mother Rumidja is
a Christian as she married a Christian man. She
would like to keep her son Christian. This film
shows us in a very visual and involved manner how,
in spite of many difficulties, people can survive
in Indonesia.
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Downwind:
Depleted Uranium Weapons in the Age of
Virtual War
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USA,
2000, 50 min
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Director:
Jawad Metni
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Producer:
Pinhole Pictures
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Director's
Contact: jawad@pinholepictures.com
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'Downwind' draws a
line from Hiroshima through the Nevada nuclear test
site to the sands of Iraq and Kuwait, where
thousands of soldiers and civilians were exposed to
toxic, irradiating dust particles by the use of
depleted uranium tank penetrators. Used extensively
in the 1991 and 2003 Gulf Wars, and in Bosnia,
Kosovo and Afghanistan, these DU weapons
effectively destroy heavy armor and fortified
bunkers, yet they release very fine uranium oxide
particles, which may be inhaled or ingested. Though
the long-term effects are highly contested, there
is little indication that the U.S. military
informed soldiers or civilians about the possible
adverse health and environmental effects. Blending
broad issues of history and memory with the near
ubiquitous control of war imagery by the military,
'Downwind' raises questions about the true human
cost when the desire for total victory outweighs
the moral obligations of humanitarian intervention.
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Fi
Shabaket El Ankaboot
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In
the Spider's Web
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Palastine,
2003, 45 min
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Director:
Hanna Musleh
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Producer: Al-Haq:
Law in the Service of Man
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Director's
Contact: hannawmusleh@hotmail.com
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This film, shot in
2003 in the Palestinian Territories, forms part of
Al-Haq's campaign against collective punishments,
the penalizing of a group as a whole with no regard
for individual responsibility. Such punishments and
other measures of intimidation have been utilized
by the Israeli authorities against Palestinians in
the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) for
decades. Through the film, Al-Haq provides an
overview of these punitive measures against the
Palestinian civilian population. While the film
mainly addresses the accounts of two women, it also
highlights the impact that measures of collective
punishment have had on the whole civilian
population. This documentary seeks to capture and
relay some of the disastrous implications that the
continuous construction of the Separation Wall and
the further expropriation of land for its
construction.
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Holiday
Camp
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Australia,
2003, 47 min
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Director:
Jennifor Lyons-Reid, Thorsten Black, Carl
Kuddell
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Director's
Contact: tallstoreez@yahoo.de
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In a bold and
arresting visual style, 'Holiday Camp' connects the
issues of indigenous dispossession, genocide and
the incarceration of refugees. Exploring
implications of the mandatory detention system and
the construction of national borders, 'Holiday
Camp' challenges Australians to consider dimensions
of policy, humanity and freedom.
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In
Whose Interest?
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UK,
2002, 27 min
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Director:
David Kaplowitz
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Director's
Contact: dkapz@yahoo.com
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'In Whose
Interest?' is a fast moving and powerful 27-minute
documentary in response to 9/11. San Francisco and
London-based filmmaker David Kaplowitz leads us on
an eye-opening historical journey through the past
50 years of United States intervention, questioning
the motives and examining the effects of US foreign
policy over that time span. Revealing a pattern of
intervention, the film focuses on Guatemala,
Vietnam, East Timor, El Salvador, and
Palestine/Israel. Archive footage, photographs,
recently declassified documents, and media tidbits
are dynamically interwoven with personal eyewitness
accounts and commentary from academics, such as
Noam Chomsky, religious leaders and politicians.
'In Whose Interest?' is informative and
disturbingly honest, yet upbeat, with twists of
irony and humor.
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Jang
Aur Aman
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War
and Peace
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India,
2002, 130 min
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Director:
Anand Patwardhan
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Director's
Contact: anandpat@vsnl.com
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Filmed over three
tumultuous years in India, Pakistan, Japan and the
USA, 'War and Peace' is a documentary journey of
peace activism in the face of global militarism and
war. Triggered by macabre scenes of jubilation that
greeted nuclear testing in the Indian
sub-continent, the film is dramatically framed by
the murder of Mahatma Gandhi. Fifty years after his
death, memories of Gandhi seem like a mirage that
never was, created by our thirst for peace and our
very distance from its realisation.
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Jeremy
Hardy vs The Israeli Army
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UK/Palestine,
2003, 75 min
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Director:
Leila Sansour
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Producer:
Asparagus Pictures
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Director's
Contact: leila@sansour.com
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Overcome by
curiosity and a love of justice, British comedian
Jeremy Hardy travels to Palestine to try his hand
at ending the occupation. What he does not know is
that he will bear testimony to a horrific yet
seminal moment in the struggle of the Palestine
people. 'Jeremy Hardy vs. The Israeli Army' is the
unlikely journey of an unlikely witness from
onlooker to human shield. From the stand-off at
Yasser Arafat's compound to the siege of the Church
of the Nativity, 'Jeremy Hardy vs. The Israeli
Army' captures the birth of a new kind of political
engagement. Jeremy is struck by the commitment of
people who pack their bags for Palestine to stand
in the way of guns and tanks. He never expected the
scale of the phenomenon that came to be known as
the International Solidarity Movement.
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'LBJ' is a satire
and a historical synthesis of the violence in the
United States of America since early times in
history through the murders of Martin Luther King,
John and Robert Kennedy.
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Not
in My Name
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UK/Afghanistan,
2002, 41 min
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Director:
Tonny Benn
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Producer:
Chris Reeves
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Director's
Contact: platform.films@virgin.net
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'Not in My Name'
explores the beginnings of George Bush's "war on
terrorism". People across the world deplored the
attack on America on September 11th, 2001, but have
American right wingers used it as a pretext for
unleashing a dangerous war of terror of their own?
The film tells the story of how America came to
attack Afghanistan and explores the history of US
and UK involvement in the region. It also explains
the background of Osama bin Laden, and the
important part the US played in his career.
Contributions from Tony Benn, John Pilger, Paul
Foot, Jon Snow, Salma Yaqoob, Tariq Ali, George
Galloway and Bianca Jagger. Launched in 2002, the
video has been shown by independent cinemas and at
public meetings across the UK and in the
US.
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Not
in My Name II - The Human
Shields
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UK/Iraq,
2003, 58 min
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Director:
Marcus Relton
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Producer:
Chris Reeves
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Director's
Contact: platform.films@virgin.net
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In January 2003
around 25 people got in three London double-decker
buses and set out for Iraq. Their aim was to stop a
war. 'Not in My Name II - The Human Shields'
follows their journey across Europe, Turkey and
Syria to Baghdad. They receive huge support along
the way and they inspire hundreds of other people
to become human shields. En route there are
problems with the press and disputes over the
leadership. After their 3,000 mile drive they enter
Iraq and discover the disturbing realities of a
country suffering from the effects of sanctions,
killer diseases and the depleted uranium weapons
used in the first Gulf War. There are disputes
between some shields and the Iraqi regime. Some go
home, but around 140 stay. They describe the impact
of the US-led bombing and invasion. The film asks
what difference did the human shields make? Did
they save lives? Did they affect how the war was
conducted?
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With the UK
government actively supporting the illegal invasion
of Iraq, three busloads set off on the 22nd of
March, 2002 for an anti-war demonstration at an
English airbase used by the US jets during bombing
raids. But the protesters never made it: they were
stopped, searched for two hours and then hijacked
by the police. One hundred and twenty people on
three buses were escorted back to London, down a
major motorway cleared for the purpose, amidst
claims that the protesters - rather than the
bombers - might 'breach the peace' if they
excercised their right to freedom of movement and
expression. This film shows some of the suppression
of dissent in the UK while 'democracy and human
rights' remain as far away as ever in Iraq and
other targets of US/UK military
adventures.
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'Papa 2' was a
notorious interrogation centre that was run by the
Indian Armed Forces untill 1996. Officially nearly
4,000 people - unofficially, over 8,000 - have
disappeared from the Kashmir Valley over the past
15 years. The film has interviews with the affected
people and also members of the Association of
Parents of Disappeared People.
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Skrivene
Rane
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Hidden
Wounds
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Serbia/Montenegro,
2003, 17 min
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Director:
Milorad Ivanovic and Stanka
Macesic
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Producer:
Media Focus Center for Investigative
Journalism and ECBJ (European Center of
Broadcast Journalism)
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Director's
Contact: miloradi@hotmail.com
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'Hidden Wounds' is
TV documentary film on Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder (PTSD) in Serbia - also known as a
Vietnamese Syndrome. This film follows three people
who suffered traumas in the war and are still
facing psychological problems.
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The
Fourth World War
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Palestine/South
Africa/Korea/Iraq/Mexico/Argentina/Italy/USA,
2003, 74 min
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Director:
Jacqueline Soohen and Richard
Rowley
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Producer:
Big Noise Tactical Media
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Director's
Contact: rick@bignoisetactical.org
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Shot on the front
lines of struggles on five continents where the
mainstream media cannot go, 'The Fourth World War'
is an untold human story of the current global
conflict.
While our airwaves
are crowded with talk of a new world war, narrated
by generals and filmed from the noses of bombs, the
human story of this global conflict remains untold.
'The Fourth World War' weaves together the images
and voices of the war on the ground in Mexico,
Argentina, South Africa, Palestine, Korea, 'The
North' from Seattle to Genova, and the 'War on
Terror' in New York and Iraq. It reveals a
terrifying system of global violence in which we
are all caught and more importantly it introduces
us to the men and women with whom we share this
planet - men and women who will stop this
war.
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The
Killing Zone
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USA/Ghana,
2003, 80 min
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Director:
Joe Brewster
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Producer:
Michèle Stephenson, Zone
Productions
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Director's
Contact: radafilm@radafilm.com
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'The Killing Zone'
is an urban thriller set in contemporary New York
City. It is the story of Malcolm Ojewku, played by
Isaach de Bankole, a Nigerian psychiatrist who
witnesses the murder of his adoptive father, by a
homeless twelve-year-old boy. The death evokes
haunting flashbacks of Malcolm's own past as a
child soldier during the Biafra War in Nigeria.
Malcolm is compelled to search for the killer and
resolve his inner turmoil, even at the expense of
destroying his own family.
As the film
unfolds, we discover the story of Malcolm's violent
past and how Dr. Michael Stevens (Atong), played by
Peter Francis James, an idealistic African-American
missionary, who would become his adoptive father,
and remove him from Nigeria's inter-ethnic
violence. Atong, sensing the different and
compassionate Malcolm, entangled in his violent
surroundings, helps him to leave the country and
achieve the successes of an accomplished
psychiatrist in America.
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