Archive for October, 2011

Support Radical Media

Dear subMedia supporters,

It’s been a whirlwind of a year for me. I started touring with END:CIV almost a year ago so far I’ve personally shown it over 100 times. Yep, that’s more than 100 Q and A sessions in four countries and in four languages. I’ve traveled over 40,000 KM by foot, bike, boats, van, buses, jets and trains. Online views of END:CIV are close to 80,000 on multiple platforms and grassroots screenings keep popping up every month. So far I’ve posted 9 translations on the website with a few more in the coming weeks including Turkish, Mandarin, Cantonese and Indonesian. All in all I consider this 5 year project a success.

My newest project has the working title of Stop the Flows. Over the next five years I will document resistance movements that are working towards stopping the flows of hydro carbons, mineral extraction, natural resources and capital, through grassroots and underground organizing. I will publish the dispatches as I complete them with the goal of compiling them into a feature length documentary to be released on 2016.

The first dispatch took me to Central BC where Unis’toten nation are pre-empting the construction of 4 oil and gas pipelines through their traditional territories. You can watch that here. The next dispatch will focus on the growing opposition to an oil pipeline expansion right here where I live in Vancouver. In December I will compile the hours of interviews and footage I gathered while in Japan, for a dispatch spotlighting the growing grassroots anti-nuke movement. In January I hope to travel to Australia to continue touring and gathering material for Stop the Flows and ditto goes for Europe in the spring.

So this is my pitch and appeal for financial support. As you may or may not know, subMedia does no receive money from foundations, corporations or governments. This fact has kept our media truly independent and rogue, videos that don’t mince words or tap dance around the issues. I feel the this type of unfiltered media is crucial in these times, when we are witnessing increased suppression of dissent, but also the birth of a global revolutionary movement.

With that said, consider donating a few bucks to subMedia. The goal is to raise $10,000 by the end of the year to push these projects through the winter.

Thanks again for supporting radical media!

frank

END:CIV – 日本語

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END:CIV は、私達の文化が常習的に繰り返す組織的な暴力と環境破壊についてのドキュメンタリーだ。その結果として生み出されるのは、汚染された大地と、精神に動揺を来した国家である。デリック・ジェンセンの著作『エンドゲーム(最終局面)』に部分的に依拠しながら、 END:CIV は次のような質問を見る者に投げかける。「エイリアンが故郷を侵略して木々を切り倒し、水と空気そして食料を汚染したとしたら、あなたは抵抗するだろうか。」

文明の崩壊の原因を辿れば、多くの場合、資源の過剰な消費という要因にたどり着く。経済の混乱、石油の枯渇、気候変動、環境の悪化などの問題によって、世界は不安定な状態に陥っている。新聞や雑誌の見出しに日々踊るのは、人々の期待への裏切りとスキャンダルの物語だ。だが現在のグローバル・システムの終焉を怒りとともに要求する必要などない。システムは、既に崩壊しつつあるのだから。

最悪の被害をこうむった場所にさえ、勇気と共感、そして利他主義の行動の輪は広がっている。戦争と不況の最大の被害者が立ち直る姿、そして真正面からこの危機に立ち向かう人々の勇気ある行為を映し出すことで、 END:CIV は全てを消費しつくそうとする狂気からの脱出と、より健全な未来への道のりを照らし出す。

デリック・ジェンセンの主張を根拠に、このドキュメンタリーは見る者に、この大地への本当の愛を求めてくる。矢継ぎ早に進行しながら、音楽や過去の映像、モーショングラフィックス、アニメーション、ユーモアや皮肉を巧みに散りばめる事で、私達の身の回りで内部崩壊しているグローバルな経済システムを、このドキュメンタリーは解体しようとしているのである。 END:CIV は当事者の犠牲や勇気ある行動を取り上げ、そこに強烈な、感情をかきたてる映像を加えることで、ジェンセンの詩的で直感的なアプローチと絶妙の調和を示している。未開地で撮影された映像は、日常的に起こっている恐ろしい破壊行為の明白な証拠であるとともに、息を呑むような自然の美しさという一服の清涼剤を与えてくれる。

END:CIVでインタビューに応じてくれた関係者は以下の通りである。
ポール・ワトソン、ワジヤタウィン、ゴード・ヒル、マイケル・ベッカー、ピーター・ゲルダルース、リエール・キース、ジェームズ・ハワード・カンスラー、ステファニー・マックミラン、クワチナス、ロッド・コロナド、ジョン・ザーザン、スティーヴン・ベスト、アリック・マクベイ、ジョージ・ポイトラス、シュスリ、ゾーエ・ブラント、ドルー・オジャ・ジェイ、マヤ・ロビン−ゲイニー、シャノン・ウォルシュ、マクドナルド・ステインズビー、マイク・マークレディ

監督:フランクリン・ロペス/2011年/75分/日本語字幕:島大吾
For more tour dates click here

Small in Japan

It’s been a whirlwind two weeks in Japan. From the moment of my arrival I knew I was in for a ride. I was supposed to meet Narita. the lead organizer for the tour at Shijuku station. Unbeknown to me, Shijuku station is the biggest train station in Tokyo with an estimated 2 million people going through it every single fuckin day. Alas I did not find him, and had to figure out where the screening was. With no phone, and no a lick of knowledge of the Japanese language, it took me 30 minutes to find an internet cafe (bizarre fuckin place, but that’s another story). Long story long, I make to to Cafe Lavanderia, an anti-capitalist event space to find a packed room still watching END:CIV. The organizers had to add a second screening to accommodate the over 100 people who showed up. Jet lagged, tired, hungry and cranky, I have to gain my composure and take part on a panel discussion with Kanzen Jisatsu Manyuaru best selling author of “The Complete Manual on Suicide” (yeah that’s right) and Ill Commonz. Yeah, that was all within my first 2 hours in Tokyo.

What followed was 14 jammed packed days of screenings and interviews. No, I’m not big in Japan and the media doesn’t want to talk to me, I was conducting interviews for a report I’m preparing on the grassroots anti-nuclear movement here. What’s happening here is not dissimilar to the Occupy Wall Street phenomenon. People here are fed up with the lies, inaction, and misinformation coming from the nuclear industry and their servants in the Government.

Activism here is not seen in a positive light by society in general and during the 80′s and 90′s there was hardly any visible trace of dissent in this country, or so I’m told. Then came the Iraq war, and mass demonstrations broke the spell of Japanese politeness. Those where followed by anti-G8 protests in 2008. So far this year there have been large (10,000′s) anti-nuclear rallies, every month since the Fukushima nuclear disaster. At the centre of this movement is group of merry trouble makers called Amateur Riot. These folks are based in the neighbourhood of Koenji, and consist of 14 tiny shops that sell anything from used furniture and appliances, second hand clothes, to bars and restaurants. These shops have provided safe spaces for activist to organize their actions. But more on that on my video report.

One of my biggest surprises here, has been poverty. Yep, there’s poor people here. And homeless too! There’s also foreign day labourers that are sent to work inside the evacuation zone in Fukushima. Like Canada, Japan guards is reputation as a democratic techno utopia with great zeal. But the economy here is tanking and unemployment growing. Suicides rates are some of the highest in the industrialized world, with over 3,000 in May alone. If you find that your trusted and punctual public transport system is delayed, chances are high that someone jumped in front of a train.

Yep, I’m vomiting all of this onto the page (so to speak) because I still have much to process. But all in all, people here are great. The hospitality I’ve received has been unparalleled and people’s resilience is amazing, even with the spectre of radiation polluting half the island. The fighting spirit I’ve witnessed has renewed my optimism, and hope that my video report further informs North Americans and beyond about the growing movement here.

Tomorrow, I return to Vancouver to join the thousands who will occupy the Vancouver Art Gallery, and by extension the billions who make the 99%.

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