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Sundance: Pretend I'm still in UtahGood stuff I saw, good stuff I missedPosted by Kate Sheppard at 10:40 AM on 29 Jan 2007I caught two other environment-relevant films while at Sundance that should be of interest to Gristmill readers, and there are a few more I missed that you should be on the lookout for as well.
In this film rendering of his photos, the director adds a narrative stream to the images, connecting the works and contemplating their relationship to each other and to us. The film focuses in particular on his work in China, highlighting the complexities of our relationship to materials and to each other -- globally and locally. It opens with a nearly 10-minute-long tracking shot down the endless rows of workbenches in a factory that creates irons and other familiar household products. The camera's ability to capture the magnitude of this landscape in both image and time adds a dynamic that Burtynsky's photos alone can't. But neither the photos nor the film offers any easy answers about the subject matter. The film is a meditation, forcing viewers to rethink the very nature of nature. Best line heard while walking out of the film: "I fell asleep. But it was great."
Best line heard walking out of it: "I wish I liked opera." I also wanted to see The Unforeseen, a film that is apparently "a meditation on the destruction of the natural world and the American Dream as it falls victim to the cannibalizing forces of unchecked development." This lady saw it, and has this to say.
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