The Power of One Voice: A 50-Year Perspective on the Life of Rachel Carson

Summary 'The Power of One Voice: A 50-Year Perspective on the Life of Rachel Carson' is a groundbreaking documentary examining the life of Rachel Carson and the profound implications of her environmental work. Perfect for classrooms and community events, this 52-minute film features interviews with Rachel Carson's adopted son, Roger Christie, her biographer, Linda Lear, and other notable writers, scientists and advocates. Today, Rachel Carson remains a role model and inspiration for people across the globe, even as the controversy created by her challenge to the chemical industry continues unabated. By highlighting the power of Carson's voice, we hope to inspire others to add their voices to this essential conversation. View more details

The Power of One Voice: A 50-Year Perspective on the Life of Rachel Carson

Directed : Mark Dixon

Written : Mark Dixon

Stars : Unknown

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Details

Genres : History Biography Documentary

Release date : Nov 30, 2014

Countries of origin : United States

Official sites : Official Facebook Official site

Language : English

Summary 'The Power of One Voice: A 50-Year Perspective on the Life of Rachel Carson' is a groundbreaking documentary examining the life of Rachel Carson and the profound implications of her environmental work. Perfect for classrooms and community events, this 52-minute film features interviews with Rachel Carson's adopted son, Roger Christie, her biographer, Linda Lear, and other notable writers, scientists and advocates. Today, Rachel Carson remains a role model and inspiration for people across the globe, even as the controversy created by her challenge to the chemical industry continues unabated. By highlighting the power of Carson's voice, we hope to inspire others to add their voices to this essential conversation. View more details

Details

Genres : History Biography Documentary

Release date : Nov 30, 2014

Countries of origin : United States

Official sites : Official Facebook Official site

Language : English

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America and Me

America and Me

Australian filmmaker David Bradbury has been coming and going to the United States for the last forty years. A one-man band political activist who always travels with his camera, the twice Academy Award nominated Bradbury was easily able to slip into gear and start filming in eight US cities in the three month lead up to the shock election of Donald Trump, 2016. Bradbury was filming the native American Indian protest at Standing Rock when America woke to the news. America once was Great. Due largely to the hard work, innovation of its people...and exploiting the resources and labour of others for its greater gain. America and Me chronicles how the hawks have come home to roost in the nest of America itself, 40 years after Ronald Reagan championed the economic theories of Milton Friedman and his infamous Chicago Boys. America and Me interviews veterans of America's failed wars to maintain Empire, gets down in the gutter with the homeless to find out what life is like on the streets, speaks to a nun who was violated by the military junta in Guatemala under the directions of a CIA operative, goes to the US/ Mexican border where Trump plans to build the Wall, exposes the deadly connection between CIA HQ Langley, Virginia to CIA spy base Pine Gap in Australia, responsible for the death of hundreds of children and adults from drone attacks....and ends up at Standing Rock where private security guards turned dogs onto non violent protesters and sprayed mace at point blank range. Bradbury uses telling moments from his earlier films shot on the edge of the American Colossus - Nicaragua No Pasaran, Chile Hasta Cuando? (Pinochet's dictatorship), Frontline (about the Vietnam war) and South of the Border (the New Song movement and radical politics versus dictatorship in Central America), to give context to his critique of the American penchant for Empire.

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