The sweet, chilly brick theater had a small crowd and tons of other things to offer besides the tiny heroic films (my favorites of which being delicious beer, the freshest of cupcakes and a giant map pointing out all of the local farmer stands/markets)! The series of films screened were quietly touching, making environmental standpoints but not in terms that are too dramatic, sensational or overreaching, a great feel given the fact that audiences and issues can vary so so much from place to place. The opening short, Witness, was really, really great exploring the relationship between nature photography and conservation efforts. It told a stunning tale of how simple images can create National Parks, spur governments into action and drastically change our relationship with nature. It had some magnificent pictures in it too and, as artists, it really spoke to me about the morality of images and the duty of people creating them.
There was also a film about plastic bags that began small but ballooned into a larger statement about our social responsibility to nature, nicely leading along with jokes and vintage dawn-of-the-disposable-60s film clips, that I think will really impact the way a lot of people think about that disposable cup they are drinking from (it also told me about the Cradle to Cradle movement led by a German chemist who is trying to get people and industry to rethink their ideas of product life: cradle to cradle not cradle to grave. This massive problem so poignantly and simply stated! Amazing!). I truely wish more people had been at this event, it is so rare that people in our area try to do something progressive and it is kind of a bummer that there were only a handful of attendees...but, I am personally grateful to everyone who put this on giving me some faith in my community members and finding a few people out here who appreciate their wild and scenic landscape just as much as I do! Now, back to admiring the deer out the kitchen window! O, and animating....still animating...