Water Docs Film Festival 2015 Kicks Off With DamNation, March 20 Water Docs Celebrates Canada Water Week and World Water Day with a buoyant, nine-day lineup of water-themed film screenings and related activities at the Art Gallery of Ontario, March 20-28 Water Docs Family Day activities feature film screenings, the Water Brothers live, along with fun, interactive games for the whole family, March 21 at the AGO’s Jackman Hall Water Docs programming flows across Toronto as Seeking the Current highlights Soirée Francophone at Alliance Française, March 27 To tweet this release: TORONTO (February XX, 2015) – A deluge of stunning documentaries celebrating the magical, mythical, life-sustaining properties of water rise to centre stage at the 4th annual Water Docs Film Festival, kicking off Friday March 20. With a lineup of nine feature film screening events and dozens of short films during the nine-day showcase (March 20-28), the festival opens with SXSW 2014 prize winner DamNation – a visually stunning exploration of changing national attitudes toward big dams. Directors Ben Knight and Travis Rummel cinematically deconstruct dams as engineering marvels, skillfully highlighting a growing awareness that the future of humanity is bound to the life and health of rivers. The opening screening takes place on Friday, March 20 at 7 p.m. at the Art Gallery of Ontario’s Jackman Hall (317 Dundas Street West, McCaul Street entrance). The screening will be followed by Water Docs official opening night reception at the Bau-Xi Photo Gallery – open to all screening attendees (324 Dundas St. W.). Photo from DamNation (Courtesy Ben Knight and Travis Rummel) Throughout the nine-day festival, Water Docs salutes Canada Water Week and World Water Day (March 22) with a special lineup of community screenings and events, along with Q&A sessions with filmmakers and experts from the water community. A complete list of festival programming is available online at http://www.waterdocs.ca. “This year’s slate of water-themed documentaries and shorts provides a thirst-quenching glance at the magnificence of the world, capturing its largesse while also shining a spotlight on the reality of its finite fresh water supply,” said Stan Gibson, Founder and Executive Director, Ecologos and the Water Docs Film Festival. “Beyond stunning cinematography and rich storytelling, the goal of Water Docs is to unite and engage audiences in a discussion around the preservation and protection of water sources, and we are proud to provide a platform that enlightens, engages and motivates the desire to drive change.” Returning to Water Docs following its awe-inspiring debut at the festival in 2014, the popular interactive mobile installation Pedal Power will be on site at festival headquarters, at the entrance of Jackman Hall throughout the duration of the festival. Visitors are welcome to use the bicycle style foot pedal to draw water up a clear tube and into a glass, providing a real-time, kinesthetic experience of how much energy and effort it takes to bring water to people when and where they use it. Ticket information is available online at http://www.brownpapertickets.com/profile/557968 Festival passes are available for $40 in advance / $50 at the door (does not include Family Day). General Admission: $12.50 advance, $15 at the door. Students / Seniors: $11 in advance / $13 at the door. The following is a listing of the Water Docs Film Festival slate of feature documentary programming: Wednesday, March 18 – Pre-Festival Intercultural Screening at University of Toronto with the Ontario Water Works Association: Monsoon – 5:30 p.m., HS 160, Health Sciences Building, 155 College Street. **FREE OF CHARGE and OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Filmed over the course of India’s 2013 monsoon season in ultra-high definition 4K, multiple awardwinning Canadian filmmaker Sturla Gunnarsson chased the monsoon on its annual journey from the southern state of Kerala, where it first makes landfall, to India's north-eastern state of Meghalaya ('Place of the Clouds’), where the clouds go to die. A cinematic journey into the terrain where nature, science, belief and wonder converge in one of the most astonishing and breathtaking landscapes on earth, Monsoon captures the timelessness and rich human drama of our engagement with the natural world. Please visit this link to view the trailer. Thursday, March 19 – Water Activities for the Whole Family: 12:00-4:00 p.m., AGO Basement (317 Dundas St. W.) NO SCREENINGS. **Facilitated by Ecoloodi and Engineers Without Borders. As part of the AGO’s March Break Programming, Water Docs Family Day is a special day filled with fun and engaging water-themed activities for the whole family. With interactive games and interesting activities for all ages, participants learn all about water and just how important it is for everyone. The events take place in Seminar Room 1 @ the AGO. Tickets for this special day can be purchased through the AGO directly and include all of the AGO’s regular March Break programming. Friday, March 20 – Opening Night: DamNation – 7:00 p.m., AGO Jackman Hall (317 Dundas St. W., McCaul Street entrance) Directed by Ben Knight and Travis Rummel, the film explores the change in national attitude from pride in big dams as engineering wonders to the growing awareness that the future of humanity is bound to the life and health of rivers. Where obsolete dams come down, rivers bound back to life, giving salmon and other wild fish the right of return to primeval spawning grounds, after decades without access. Click here for the trailer Saturday, March 21 – Family Day: The Water Brothers’ The Big Thaw and No Woman, No Water, Family Day Activities -12 Noon-4:00 p.m. – The Water Brothers screenings begin at 2:00 p.m., AGO Jackman Hall (317 Dundas St. W., McCaul Street entrance) **Filmmakers in attendance for a post-screening Q&A. Water Docs delivers a special presentation of The Big Thaw and No Woman, No Water, along with a selection of shorts by the National Film Board of Canada and others. The Water Brothers is an eco-adventure documentary series that follows Alex and Tyler Mifflin as they explore the world and people’s relationship with water. With rising sea levels, the fate of the world depends on slowing the Big Thaw. In The Big Thaw, The Water Brothers visit the Arctic to get the facts and find answers. And in No Woman, No Water, the Brothers travel to Africa to the most water-scarce regions of Tanzania and Kenya, to see firsthand how simple water projects can make huge changes towards economic advancement – and how it is women who hold the key to improving clean water and sanitation access in their local communities. Click here for the series promo trailer. As part of the AGO’s March Break Programming, Water Docs Family Day is also a special day filled with fun and engaging activities for the whole family that will teach you all about water and just how important it is for everyone through interactive games and other interesting activities for all ages. Join Ecoloodi and Engineers Without Borders in Seminar Room 1 @ the AGO for your March Break! Saturday, March 21 – Divide in Concord – 7:00 p.m., AGO Jackman Hall (317 Dundas St. W., McCaul Street entrance) **Filmmaker Q&A Director Kris Kaczor’s feature-length documentary follows the entertaining tale of the battle of banning bottled water in small town America. The year was 1775 in Concord, Massachusetts when colonists fired the infamous ‘shot heard round the world’ that began the American Revolution. One hundred years later, the work of local resident Henry David Thoreau began the environmental movement. And now, the spirit of revolution has returned to town, as Jean Hill, a fiery 84-year-old widow and mother of four, wants to ban the sale of bottled water from Concord when her grandson tells her about the disastrous environmental effects of the empty plastic bottles. After a failed attempt to get a bylaw banning the sale of single-serve plastic bottles at the 2010 and 2011 Town Meetings passed, she vows to continue the crusade with neighbour and Harvard Law Grad Jill Appel. With billions of dollars at stake, if enacted, the law would be the first of its kind in the world. But all are not in agreement with the ban. **Filmmaker Kris Kaczor will join the audience remotely for a post-screening Q&A. Click here for the trailer. Sunday, March 22 – World Water Day: Oil & Water – 7:00 p.m., AGO Jackman Hall (317 Dundas St. W., McCaul Street entrance) **Filmmakers Q&A Oil & Water is the true story of two boys coming of age as they each confront one of the world’s worst toxic disasters. Filmmakers Laurel Spellman Smith and Francine Strickwerda chart the lives of Hugo and David, who were born on opposite ends of the oil pipeline. Hugo comes to America to fight for the survival of his Cofán tribe in the Ecuadorian Amazon, while David goes to Ecuador to launch the world’s first company to certify oil as “fair trade.” Their journeys lead them to explore what could be a more just future, not just for the Cofán, but for all people around the world born with oil beneath their feet. **Filmmakers Spellman Smith and Strickwerda join in remotely for Q&A. Please visit this link for the trailer. Tuesday, March 24 – WD@S Student Recognition Day – 9:00 a.m., Bloor Hot Docs Cinema (506 Bloor St W) **PRIVATE SCREENING EVENT Water Docs presents a collection of student films from its Water Docs @ School Action Projects program. Water warrior and activist Robyn Hamlyn, joins this special student celebration as guest speaker. Wednesday, March 25 – The Overview Effect: Shifting Perspective – A Water Docs / Waterlution Workshop: OVERVIEW – 7:00 p.m., Friends House (60 Lowther Avenue) – Facilitator: Duncan Holmes In all you’ve lived and seen, have you had an instance where you found meaning in something that is bigger than yourself? A moment of perspective shift? What changed after this moment? How can a perspective shift lead to behavioural shift? What is YOUR role in shifting your own perspective and behaviour and that of others on important water matters? Water Docs invites audiences to attend a stimulating evening with the screening of two films followed by interactive dialogue. OVERVIEW Astronauts who have seen the Earth from space have often described the ‘overview effect’ as an experience that has transformed their perspective of the planet and mankind’s place upon it, and enabled them to perceive it as our shared home, without boundaries between nations or species. OVERVIEW is a short film that explores this perspective through interviews with astronauts who have experienced the overview effect. The film features insights from commentators and thinkers on the wider implications and importance of this understanding for humanity as a whole, and its relevance in meeting the tremendous challenges facing the planet. The More Beautiful World Our Hearts Know is Possible "There is a vast territory between what we're trying to leave behind, and where we want to go and we don't have any maps for that territory." – Charles Eisenstein Filmed in the fading light on the shores of Northern Scotland, this short film captures Charles Eisenstein in a moment of grief and reflection. The familiar story of the past is crumbling, while the new story has yet to arrive. In a time of social and ecological crisis, the film questions what can individuals do in this space between? Thursday, March 26 – Three short films about water: The Water Tower, Chasing Water, Delta Dawn 7:00 p.m., AGO Jackman Hall (317 Dundas St. W., McCaul Street entrance) Water Docs presents three short water-themed documentaries by filmmaker Pete McBride. In The Water Tower, McBride documents his 2012 visit to Mt. Kenya, home to the Ngai that provides 70% of the nation’s water supply. Having climbed its false summit at nine years of age, McBride makes the shocking discovery that this is not the same mountain he scaled as a young boy. Click here to view the trailer. In Chasing Water, McBride teams up with his bush-pilot father to capture unique footage of the Colorado River, source to sea, shadowing the adventure of Jon Waterman who became the first to paddle the entire length of the river. Visit this link to view the trailer. The Colorado River ran to the sea for six million years but stopped nearly two decades ago. Delta Dawn captures the experimental pulse of water that flooded this river of sand in 2014, as a team paddled the crest to see if they could be the first to navigate this forgotten delta and once again kiss the sea. Please visit this link to the view the trailer. Thursday, March 26 – Intercultural Screening: Narmada: A Valley Rises – 7:00 p.m., Noor Cultural Centre Auditorium, 123 Wynford Drive **Q&A with filmmaker This inspiring film documents the largest multiple dam project in India, which pits the villagers against the authorities promoting it. The sacred Narmada River flows through some of Asia’s most fertile land. The 1994 film offers a compelling and intimate portrait of a unique movement while raising critical and universal issues of human rights, social justice, and development within a democracy. The Narmada saga continues to this day. Filmmaker Ali Kazimi, now Associate Professor of York University’s Department of Film, will be on hand for discussion following the screening, with reflections on other water issues. Friday, March 27 – Soirée Francophone Intercultural Screening: Seeking the Current – 7:00 p.m., Alliance Française (24 Spadina Road) – French with English subtitles. Francophone and Anglophone audiences alike are invited to join this intercultural screening. **Q&A with filmmaker Nicolas Boisclair and Alexis de Gheldere collaborate with renowned Canadian actor Roy Dupuis for this documentary of passionate environmental advocacy. Seeking the Current is a convincing critique of Hydro Quebec’s Romaine River initiative–a plan to construct four dams along the 500kilometre waterway. Narrated by Dupuis and framed by the filmmakers’ 2008 canoe journey down the river, the film details the history of Quebec’s energy industry, the likely environmental costs of the new project and the plethora of alternatives to hydroelectricity. Filmmaker Nicolais Boisclair is on hand for a live, post-screening Q&A session en français. Trailer available here. Saturday, March 28 – Closing Night: Antarctica: A Year On Ice – 7:00 p.m., AGO Jackman Hall (317 Dundas St. W., McCaul Street entrance) Anthony Powell’s ANTARCTICA: A YEAR ON ICE is a visually stunning journey to the end of the world with the hardy and devoted people who live there year-round. The research stations scattered throughout the continent host a close-knit international population of scientists, technicians and craftsmen. Isolated from the rest of the world, enduring months of unending darkness followed by periods when the sun never sets, Antarctic residents experience firsthand the beauty and brutality of the most severe environment on Earth. Capturing epic battles against hellacious storms, quiet reveries of nature's grandeur, and everyday moments of work and laughter, this unique documentary shows a steadfast community thriving in a land few humans have experienced. Using specially modified cameras and spectacular time-lapse photography, the film captures the splendor of the region like no film before. Please visit this link for the trailer. About Water Docs Film Festival Dedicated to presenting independent, ground-breaking, water-themed documentaries, Water Docs Film Festival is an annual nine-day exhibition that celebrates and promotes water protection and conservation. Water Docs provides a platform for vital discussions, and serves as a catalyst for change by providing opportunities to take action. Now in its fourth year, the festival delivers nine diverse learning and action programs developed under the Water Docs Film Festival banner, including the innovative Water Docs @ School Action Projects, currently rolled out in over a dozen Grade 8 classes across Ontario. Water Docs Film Festival is produced by Ecologos, a charitable voluntary organization that engages thousands of people each year in programs that celebrate a sense of reverence for water, inform about the challenges that threaten clean water supplies, and inspire action in defence of nature’s most precious resource. For more information, contact: Patricia -- Water Docs Publicity -- 416.302.9318 or [email protected]
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