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Showing posts with label documentary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label documentary. Show all posts
Saturday, October 21, 2023
Sunday, September 8, 2019
Major Vegan Film Festival Announces Nominees

"The Ottawa International Vegan Film Festival (OIVFF) has announced its 2019 lineup. Last year, director Alex Lockwood was titled the overall winner for his documentary 73 Cows - which later went on to win a BAFTA for Best Short Film. Now in its second year, the festival has selected 26 films out of 40 submissions from 14 different countries around the world. 60 percent of which have been directed by women."
Full story here:
Labels:
BAFTA,
documentary,
festival,
film,
nominees,
OIVFF,
Ottawa International Vegan Film Festival
Location:
Portland, OR, USA
Wednesday, February 25, 2015
Live And Let Live - Trailer
Live and Let Live is a feature documentary film examining our relationship with animals, the history of veganism and the ethical, environmental and health reasons that move people to go vegan.
Check out the trailer:
Labels:
animals,
documentary,
environmental,
ethical,
film,
health,
Live and Let Live,
vegan,
Veganism
Location:
Portland, OR, USA
Friday, July 11, 2014
Singapore Film Promotes Animal Rights/Adoption
A Taiwanese documentary “Twelve Nights,” a film produced by bestselling author Giddens Ko, was screened in Singapore last week to raise awareness of animal rights in the city state.
The screening of the film focused on the fate of dogs in shelters was attended by over 1,000 people--many accompanied by their dogs--at the outdoor Marina Barrage Green Roof. Director Raye and Taiwanese actress Sonia Sui, a sponsor of the film, were also present at the event.
Raye hopes that by showing “Twelve Nights” in Singapore, she can promote the adoption of stray animals and discourage the abandonment of pets.
The charity screening in Singapore was sponsored by home appliances brand Beko.
“Twelve Nights” records the lives of stray dogs at an animal shelter in Changhua County's Yuanlin Township. The title refers to the number of days the dogs have to be adopted before euthanasia to make more space.
The documentary grossed over NT$60 million (US$2 million) at the Taiwan box office during its run from November last year through February. The proceeds of NT$20.91 million--after deducting taxes and the share paid to cinemas--have been given to animal protection groups, including Taipei-based Stray Cats TNR (Trap Neuter Return) Association.
(Source: The China Post)
Labels:
adoption,
Animal Rights,
animals,
author,
documentary,
film,
Giddens Ko,
Singapore,
Sonia Sui,
Taiwanese,
Twelve Nights
Location:
Portland, OR, USA
Thursday, March 27, 2014
Documentary: A Will for the Woods
What if our "last act" could be a gift to the planet--a force for regeneration?
Musician, folk dancer, and psychiatrist Clark Wang prepares for his own green burial, determined that his final resting place will benefit the earth.
For more information:
A Will for the Woods
I have also added "natural, green burial" websites/information to my Links List below for those who are interested in planning a green burial for themselves and/or their loved ones. You can find the links in the list where I mention in parenthesis the burial sites are for people.
Labels:
A Will for the Woods,
Clark Wang,
documentary,
Earth,
green burial,
natural
Location:
Portland, OR, USA
Sunday, September 15, 2013
Saturday, August 31, 2013
Furever
Interesting to see the great lengths people will go to keep their companion animal in their lives.
The bonds that form between humans and their companion animals, the dimensions of grief people experience when they lose an animal, and the lengths to which they'll go to preserve more than a memory...FUREVER.
FUREVER is a feature-length documentary that explores the dimensions of grief people experience over the loss of a companion animal. It examines the sociological evolution of companion animals in the U.S. today, particularly their position in a family unit, and how this evolution is affecting those in the veterinary profession and death care industry. With interviews from grieving animal guardians, veterinarians, psychologists, sociologists, religious scholars, neuroscientists, and the many professionals who preserve an animal's body for their devastated clientele, or re-purpose an animal's cremains in unique ways (taxidermy, cloning, mummification, freeze-drying, and many more), FUREVER confronts contemporary trends, perspectives, and relevant cultural assumptions regarding attachment, religion, ritual, grief, and death, and studies the bonds that form between humans and animals, both psychological and physiological.
Sixty-two percent of Americans have a companion animal, and they spent a total of $52.9 billion on their companions last year. Many judge animal guardians who choose to memorialize their deceased companions as unbalanced, yet religious or cultural rituals for deceased people often seem unusual to outsiders.
How "real" is grief for a dead companion animal and who decides what kind of grief is acceptable, or appropriate?
Rather than pathetic or morbid, these animal guardians embody America's muddled attitudes toward death and dying, touching on our collective fear of aging, and how that fear is shaped by the shifting influences of religion, technology, family, and money.
Labels:
companion animal,
documentary,
film,
Furever,
grief,
pet
Location:
Portland, OR USA
Friday, February 8, 2013
Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home
Inspired by the idea that one person's change of heart can change the world, Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home explores the ethical awakening of several people who grew up in traditional farming culture and have now come to question the basic assumptions of their way of life. The 78-minute documentary features seven remarkable individuals engaged in a courageous struggle of conscience, each trying to re-integrate the parts of themselves that were fragmented by expectations and experiences that went against their deepest natures. The film provides insight into their sometimes amazing connections with the animals under their care, while also making clear the complex web of social, psychological and economic forces that have led them to their conflict.
Described by many viewers as a life-changing experience, Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home shatters stereotypical notions of farmers, farm life, and perhaps most surprisingly, farm animals themselves.
Described by many viewers as a life-changing experience, Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home shatters stereotypical notions of farmers, farm life, and perhaps most surprisingly, farm animals themselves.
I'm glad their website, Tribe of Heart, gives the correct definition of being vegetarian as many people--including me sometimes--tend to automatically think if a person says they don't eat any animal products at all, they must be vegan--not so!
Vegetarian
"A diet that includes vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds and grains and is free from all animal products including dairy and eggs. Also used to describe a person who eats such a diet. Common confusion: Often mistakenly used to describe those who do not eat flesh but do consume other animal products such as diary and eggs. Such a diet would be more accurately described by the term ovo-lacto vegetarian."
"A diet that includes vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds and grains and is free from all animal products including dairy and eggs. Also used to describe a person who eats such a diet. Common confusion: Often mistakenly used to describe those who do not eat flesh but do consume other animal products such as diary and eggs. Such a diet would be more accurately described by the term ovo-lacto vegetarian."
So remember, all those celebrities announcing to the world that they are "vegan" because of their change in eating are not vegan--they are vegetarians.
Peaceable Kingdom's definition of vegan is found at: Peaceable Journey: Food & Daily Life: Vegan
Labels:
documentary,
ethical,
farm,
film,
Peaceable Kingdom: The Journey Home,
vegan,
vegetarian
Location:
Portland, OR USA
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