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Contributed by Stephen Applebaum |
Friday, 28 September 2007 |
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“We were being chased to the airport by a bunch of chimeres, and people
were being shot on the streets. Just at the airport, in front of the
terminal, a guy got shot right when we arrived.”
I don't know if Denmark’s Asger Leth has ever actually said he would die for his art. Actions speak louder than words, though, and while making the controversial documentary Ghosts of Cite Soleil, Leth often wondered if he and his co-director/ cinematographer, Milos Loncarevic, would live long enough to finish the project. To get film in the can they risked going home in a box.
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Written by Suchandrika Chakrabarti |
Tuesday, 05 December 2006 |
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Clare Richards won the prestigious Grierson documentary award for her directorial debut, Disabled and Looking for Love, on Friday 14 November. Even now the shock hasn’t worn off for her, as she said: “I’m feeling a bit calmer about it now. But it was wonderful to have been nominated.”
On the film’s subject, she said: “It’s about looking for a partner through the eyes of people who have disabilities to contend with.” Clare filmed her subjects speaking about forming relationships, as well as in social situations, where difficult truths were often revealed.
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Written by James MacGregor |
Tuesday, 14 November 2006 |
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'The idea that a disabled person should want to have a sex life is still considered fairly taboo, I have found. Non-disabled people don't like to think about it, or at least they aren't confronted by it as an issue, because it's easier for non-disabled people to go to bars, get drunk and cop off even if they find it hard to form lasting relationships. It's just not as easy for someone who has a disability to think ‘right, I fancy a shag I'll go and get laid', or think, ‘right I think I am about ready to get into a relationship with someone now' and really start looking because a lot of disabled people are housebound, rely on care 24 hours a day or simply can't afford to get themselves to a bar that happens to have disabled access and a toilet - and that's assuming they are mentally prepared to be shunned as a person for simply being disabled.'
Clare Richards, Winner, Grierson newcomer award, Director of Disabled and Looking For Love
James MacGregor has been talking to Clare Richards about her remarkable debut documentary which landed a Grierson Newcomer nomination before scooping the Newcomer Award.
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Contributed by Stephen Applebaum |
Thursday, 13 April 2006 |
We
are in danger of becoming extinct. We worry about the rhino and the
blue copper butterfly or whatever, but we are on our way to becoming a
different thing, a half-computerised species. I think there is
something about just the eccentricity of the Englishness of
the Glastonbury Festival that does say, ‘Remember you’re a
human being and you’re not programmed. However much you’re bombarded
with things telling you what to be, you should find that in yourself
and with other people, and not ever lose that or you’ll lose humanity.’
And the journey’s been so rapid so far, we should wake up to
that, not just global warming, which is a problem the festival
pointed out 35 years ago. We should worry about the very nature of our
humanity and of our soul being taken away.
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Contributed by Stephen Applebaum |
Tuesday, 04 April 2006 |
I knew very little about Wal-Mart, I was incredibly ignorant, so it was a huge learning experience for me. It’s embarrassing that I didn’t know much but it’s also what made making this film so amazing for me, because I’m coming in, in a sense, with the audience’s eyes. So the amount of influence they have over so many people, in so many different ways, made a huge impact on me and all my colleagues working on the film, and it really gave us this incredible sense of responsibility in terms of trying to do it and trying to do it well, and trying to reach as many people as we could. Because whether you’re a home owner or a worker who’s being exploited, or someone where the environment’s being affected, or working in a sweatshop overseas, or a family business that’s been driven out, Wal-Mart is an equal-opportunity abuser and its spread is quite amazing.
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Written by Sarah K. Wood, University of Birmingham UK |
Monday, 27 March 2006 |
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"I
made this film because I feel a sense of responsibility as an
American. Here we are, living in a place of enormous wealth,
opportunity, beauty and privilege, where alongside those things, and to
preserve those things, our government engages in extremely dangerous
behavior. Here, if you choose, you can ignore US foreign policy.
Meanwhile, around the world, American foreign, economic and military
policy, is not something you can ignore. In fact, it is determining the
course of your life, your aspirations and your potential. So, as an
American, I have the chance to try and do something about that..."
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