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New Film Events

Friday March 22nd, 2024 – Fracking the Peace

Fracking the Peace

Venue: South Surrey Recreation and Arts Centre,
              14601 20 Ave, Surrey, BC Google Maps
Date: March 22nd, 2024
Time: Doors open at 6:00PM, Film starts at 6:30PM

Detailed Flyer Link

Fracking the Peace is a powerful documentary by Stand.earth following the people whose lives, water, and land have been changed by fracking.
Fracking and its related industrialization on Treaty 8 territory in Northeastern B.C. has had a devastating impact on local communities. It has harmed their physical and mental health, threatened traditional hunting and fishing practices, the water and the land.

Categories
New Film Events

Friday February 23rd, 2024 – The Skin We’re In

Venue: South Surrey Recreation and Arts Centre,
              14601 20 Ave, Surrey, BC   Google Maps
Date:    February 23rd, 2024
Time:   Doors open at 6:00PM, Film starts at 6:30PM

Detailed Flyer Link

An urgent exploration of race relations, this documentary from acclaimed director Charles Officer follows award-winning journalist and activist Desmond Cole as he pulls back the curtain on racism in Canada, inviting all Canadians to understand the experience of being in his skin. Cole won a National Magazine Award for his impactful and incisive Toronto Life cover story about carding and racial profiling. Now, in Officer’s starkly honest doc, he journeys across North America, exploring what it’s really like to be Black in the 21st century.

Categories
New Film Events

Friday January 26th 2024 – 5 Broken Cameras

 

Venue: South Surrey Recreation and Arts Centre,
              14601 20 Ave, Surrey, BC
Date:    January 26th, 2024
Time:   Doors open at 6:00PM, Film starts at 6:30PM

Detailed Flyer Link

When his fourth son Gibreel is born in 2005, self-taught cameraman Emad Burnat, a Palestinian villager, gets his first camera. At the same time, the people of his village begin to resist the construction of a separation barrier that will consume their farmlands.

For the next year, Burnat films this non-violent struggle, lead by two of his best friends, while simultaneously recording the growth of his son.
Very soon, these events begin to affect Emad and
his family. Daily arrests,  violent attacks, destruction, and loss of life scare his family, as the protesters are shot at and detained by police.

As Emad documents these events, one camera after another is smashed – and each camera becomes a chapter in his struggle.

Categories
Archived Films

Friday December 1st, 2023 – Love in the Time of Fentanyl

Detailed Flyer Link

South Surrey Recreation and Arts Centre, 14601 20 Ave, Surrey, BC

December 1st, doors open at 5:30PM, Film starts at 6:00PM

A group of misfits, artists, and drug users operates a renegade safe injection site in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside. Love in the Time of Fentanyl is an intimate portrait of a community fighting to save lives and keep hope alive in a neighborhood ravaged by the overdose crisis.

DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT
I have had the honour of being a part of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside (DTES) community for many years and it has played a significant role in shaping who I am today.
There is no way for me to describe the amount of grief, loss, and trauma that this crisis has inflicted on the neighborhood. In 2018, I began to document various stories and responses to the crisis — including the Overdose Prevention Society (OPS), a grassroots safe drug consumption space that emerged as a radical antidote to government inaction.

Similar to the DTES as a whole, the Overdose Prevention Society is a place filled with outcasts fighting every day to improve and save the lives of their neighbours in the face of multiple challenges and systemic oppression. OPS is one of the many unique and courageous responses to this crisis in the DTES. We have a lot to learn from this community, not only in terms of reforming nonsensical drug policies, but in working towards a more just and compassionate society.

My primary motivation in making LOVE IN THE TIME OF FENTANYL was to upend deeply entrenched beliefs about addiction, counter the often dehumanizing stereotypes and misconceptions about drug users, and create an empathetic portrait of an unconventional community of frontline workers who display incredible heroism and ingenuity in confronting this crisis..
– Colin Askey

Categories
Archived Films

Friday October 27, 2023 – The World Is My Country

South Surrey Recreation and Arts Centre, 14601 20 Ave, Surrey, BC

October 27th, doors open at 6:00PM, Film starts at 6:30PM

The World is My Country

In 1971, John Lennon called on the world to “imagine there’s no countries”. Few are aware that more than two decades previously, WWII veteran Gary Davis started a movement to achieve what Lennon only implored us to imagine. Among Davis’s supporters were such notables as Albert Einstein and Albert Camus. More recently, Martin Sheen has joined in the cause.

Was Gary Davis a dreamer or might his vision prevent the nightmare so many continue to live through? Imagining no countries “isn’t hard to do,” but is making it so even possible?

Come discover the man, the movement, and a truly new world that we can be a part of.

WARNING: Watching this film may cause you to think you can change the world!

It’s the movie that is inspiring new hope! It’s the intriguing story of how one little guy, a song and dance man on Broadway, turned war guilt over bombing civilians into electrifying action that galvanized war weary Europe and sparked a movement. A mighty movement that helped pave the way for universal human rights and a uniting of the nations of Europe!

Now this film can help inspire the people of the world to do something even grander. It’s a lost piece of history, that gives us what Martin Sheen calls: “A roadmap to a better future!”

TheWorldIsMyCountry.com

Categories
Archived Films

Friday September 29th, 2023 – Healing the Hurts

Healing the Hurts

The ground-breaking documentary “Healing the Hurts” ignited the Canadian Indian Residential School Healing Movement in 1986. This dynamic and heartfelt film examines the devastating effects of these Schools which dramatically shattered Indigenous cultures, families, and communities. First Nations participants from Canada and the United States, embark on a four-day, culturally-based, healing process of understanding and recovery from the scourge of Intergenerational Trauma.

Hereditary Chief Phil Lane Jr., Member-Ihanktonwan, and Chickasaw NationsFollowing the 60-minute film, a discussion, and teach-in will be led by Hereditary Chief Phil Lane Jr., Member-Ihanktonwan, and Chickasaw Nations, who facilitated the foundational Healing the Hurts healing process in 1986 and is a key leader in the Residential School Healing Movement

See more here Re:ReconciliACTION

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Archived Films

Friday June 16th, 2023 – The Empress of Vancouver

The Empress of Vancouver is a cinematic and intimate collision of drag, queer history, and performance art, a musical and genre-bending irreverent documentary that follows trans icon Oliv Howe as she prepares for the 40th anniversary of her coronation.

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Archived Films

Friday, May 26th 2023 – Broadcast Blues

Clear Channel neglects its emergency system, disaster strikes, and people die. Pentagon pundits profit from the same war they promote. Fox News gets a court ruling that news does not have to be true. And hate radio rules.

“Media policy is killing people in this country. Literally. And it is killing our democracy, too. Corporate-financed lawmakers have stacked the media policy deck against We the People.

Categories
Archived Films

April 28, 2023 – Can We Cool the Planet?

As global temperatures continue to rise, scientists are wondering if we need solutions that go beyond reducing emissions. From sucking carbon straight out of the air, to geoengineering our atmosphere to physically block out sunlight, to planting more than a trillion trees, the options may seem futuristic or tough to implement. But as time runs out on conventional solutions to climate change, scientists are asking the hard questions: Can new, sometimes controversial, solutions really work? And at what cost?

Categories
Archived Films

March 31st, 2023 – A BOLD PEACE

A BOLD PEACE: Costa Rica’s Path of Demilitarization

In his famous “Cross of Iron” speech in 1953, President Eisenhower critiqued the military-industrial complex while asking, “Is there no other way the world may live?” In Costa Rica today, we glimpse another way to live.

In 1948, Costa Rica dismantled their military establishment and intentionally cultivated security relationships with other nations through treaties, international laws, and international organizations. Free of the burden of military spending, they used the financial savings to invest in their people, creating strong public institutions including public higher education and universal health care. In short, Costa Ricans created a society committed to peace, solidarity, and international law. They have survived with safety and relative prosperity for nearly 70 years without a standing army.

A BOLD PEACE details the events which shook the country to its foundations, culminating in the 1948 civil war and the decision to abolish the military. Over the decades, the Costa Rican model has survived several serious crises, but the current threats may be the most formidable of all.

Executive Producer: Al Jubitz