Chasing the Moon

Chasing the Moon

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/films/chasing-moon/

Chasing the Moon, a film by Robert Stone, reimagines the race to the moon for a new generation, upending much of the conventional mythology surrounding the effort. The series recasts the Space Age as a fascinating stew of scientific innovation, political calculation, media spectacle, visionary impulses, and personal drama.

Utilizing a visual feast of previously overlooked and lost archival material – much of which has never before been seen by the public – the film features a diverse cast of characters who played key roles in these historic events. Among those included are astronauts Buzz Aldrin, Frank Borman, and Bill Anders; Sergei Khrushchev, son of the former Soviet premier and a leading Soviet rocket engineer; Poppy Northcutt, a 25-year old “mathematics whiz” who gained worldwide attention as the first woman to serve in the all-male bastion of NASA’s Mission Control; and Ed Dwight, the Air Force pilot selected by the Kennedy administration to train as America’s first black astronaut.

Bending the Arc

Bending the Arc

http://bendingthearcfilm.com/

Thirty years ago, as much of the world was being ravaged by horrific diseases like HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, three remarkable young people, barely out of their teens – Jim Yong Kim, Paul Farmer, and Ophelia Dahl – came together in a squatter settlement in Haiti.

Determined to provide the same world-class level of medical care they would expect for their own families to the Haitians that soon became their friends, they faced obstacles so enormous they weren’t even considered surmountable by the rest of the world.

They managed to bring together the resources to build real health clinics in areas that had been ignored by everyone else – where patients were as likely to arrive by donkey as by ambulance – and stocked them with the same medical supplies that could be found in places like Harvard Medical School. (Indeed, in some cases, supplies that were found at Harvard made their way to Haiti.)

Idealistic but very inexperienced, they suffered tragic early failures that made them question the way they were delivering healthcare. This led them to develop, in partnership with the patients themselves and guided by medical anthropology, a revolutionary and controversial model: training their friends and neighbors – ordinary Haitian villagers – as healthcare workers. And most remarkably – despite enormous resistance from the outside world – they treated diseases that the experts had determined could not or should not be treated in the poor because of expense and difficulty.

The groundbreaking work they began in Haiti – creating a remarkable model of how to deliver the highest-quality care in the most unlikely places – would eventually grow to have massive global effects. They expanded beyond Haiti to Peru, then onward to Rwanda, where they helped rebuild the country’s healthcare system. They averted a deadly MDR-TB epidemic, treating dying patients against official World Health Organization policy. They took on HIV/AIDS – becoming the first doctors in the world to treat patients in rural settings with full courses of anti-retrovirals.

As a result, world policies changed, deeply entrenched ideas transformed, and millions of lives were pulled back from the brink of death.
Through remarkably candid interviews and stunning never-before-seen archival and on-the-ground footage shot in the midst of a deadly epidemic, the audience is immersed in the struggle of these fiercely dedicated characters as they fight ancient diseases, scrape together funding with the lives of their friends on the line, face scorn and hostility from the global health establishment, and suffer heartbreaking mistakes from their own lack of experience.

Reaching far beyond the issue of healthcare, Bending the Arc shows how moral imagination, strategy, and sheer will together can change the trajectory of the world, bending the arc of the moral universe closer to justice.

Anote’s Ark

Anote’s Ark

http://www.anotesark.com/

What if your country was swallowed by the sea?

The Pacific Island nation of Kiribati (population: 100,000) is one of the most remote places on the planet, seemingly far-removed from the pressures of modern life. Yet it is one of the first countries that must confront the main existential dilemma of our time: imminent annihilation from sea-level rise.

While Kiribati’s President Anote Tong races to find a way to protect his nation’s people and maintain their dignity, many Kiribati are already seeking safe harbour overseas.

Set against the backdrop of international climate and human rights negotiations, Anote’s struggle to save his nation is intertwined with the extraordinary fate of Tiemeri, a young mother of six, who fights to migrate her family to New Zealand. At stake is the survival of Tiemeri’s family, the Kiribati people, and 4,000 years of Kiribati culture.

An Inconvenient Sequel

An Inconvenient Sequel

https://inconvenientsequel.tumblr.com/

Former American Vice President Al Gore continues his tireless fight, traveling around the world to train an army of activists and influence international climate policy. Cameras follow him behind the scenes, in moments both private and public, funny and poignant, as he pursues the inspirational idea that while the stakes have never been higher, the perils of climate change can be overcome with human ingenuity and passion.

Take action: https://inconvenientsequel.tumblr.com/action

Albatross

Albatross

https://www.albatrossthefilm.com/

From filmmaker Chris Jordan: “The journey of Albatross began in 2008 as a collaboration with my friend, activist / photographer Manuel Maqueda. Studying the newly emerging issue of ocean plastic pollution, we learned of a stunning environmental tragedy taking place on a tiny atoll in the center of the vast North Pacific Ocean. We immediately began planning an expedition there, and on our first trip to Midway Island in September of 2009, we and our team photographed and filmed thousands of young albatrosses that lay dead on the ground, their stomachs filled with plastic. The experience was devastating, not only for what it meant for the suffering of the birds, but also for what it reflected back to us about the destructive power of our culture of mass consumption, and humanity’s damaged relationship with the living world.”

A Slight Discomfort

A Slight Discomfort: My Prostate Diaries [Short]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iSk2k1z6eAw

A Slight Discomfort [Feature film; work-in-progress]
http://aslightdiscomfort.com/
Trailer: https://vimeo.com/60872139

The story of a man, his play, and his prostate.

From film subject Jeff Metcalf: “My name is Jeff Metcalf and I’m a professor of English at the University of Utah. Cancer and humor don’t usually fit in the same sentence. In my case, they do. I was diagnosed with prostate cancer eight years ago and given some very slim odds. I wrote a play, A Slight Discomfort, about my journey through cancer. It has been performed across the country and it has saved lives. The play explores the shared experience of being human and dealing with a crisis with grace and humor; it takes us from laughter to tears, from blushing to bravo, from thought to action, from tragedy to triumph.

“With your help, we’d like to make a documentary about my journey through cancer including everything behind the scenes and leading up to the play. It’s a good idea. There are only two degrees of separation with cancer. You either have cancer or somebody you know and love does. By making a documentary about A Slight Discomfort, we can broaden the conversation of how we deal with and live with cancer. The greatest value of this documentary will be in helping others, be it families, doctors, or survivors themselves deal with any form of cancer through laughter and light.”

72 Minutes

Twenty US military veterans die by suicide each day. In the time it takes to commute to work or exercise at the gym, the life of a veteran is lost to suicide. 72 Minutes shares the experiences of veterans who survived their suicide attempts and explores the struggle of those who have struggled for us.

Website:

http://72minutesmovie.com/

Sundance is coming!

Dear FiReFilms Member, Happy Holidays! It’s that time of year, when the perfect gift could be one that is least expected: a FiReFilms Membership! We hope you consider giving FiReFilms Memberships to your family and friends at just $195/year ($350 for dual memberships). As you’re aware, members receive up to 12 passworded Vimeo links a […]
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Final Week! Marquee Film “72 Minutes”

FiReFilms Marquee Film! 72 Minutes Final Week! Link is valid until midnight Monday, December 10 Dear SNS FiReFilms member, This month’s featured Marquee film, 72 Minutes, is an important labor of compassion and concern by first-time filmmaker and military veteran Philip Woolley. The title refers to the average frequency of deaths of US veterans by […]
To access this post, you must purchase Individual Membership, Gift Membership or Dual Membership.

Final Week! Marquee Film “72 Minutes”

FiReFilms Marquee Film! 72 Minutes Final Week! Link is valid until midnight Monday, December 10 Dear SNS FiReFilms member, This month’s featured Marquee film, 72 Minutes, is an important labor of compassion and concern by first-time filmmaker and military veteran Philip Woolley. The title refers to the average frequency of deaths of US veterans by […]
To access this post, you must purchase Individual Membership, Gift Membership or Dual Membership.