More reactions to Garbage!
December 20, 2007
Reactions from a screening at Sir Sandford Fleming College
Reactions from a screening at Sir Sandford Fleming College
Reactions to Garbage! taken after a screening at the Revue Cinema in Toronto
Garbage Producer Yvonne Welbon has been asked to speak as part of a panel at the Sundance Film Festival on the topic of internet diestribution for film
GOING IT ALONE: DIGITAL DISTRIBUTION FOR INDIE FILMMAKERS
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 12:30 P.M.
NEW FRONTIER ON MAIN (MICROCINEMA)
The myriad distribution opportunities facing today’s
filmmakers makes for a landscape of both opportunity
and confusion. How can you maximize your digital
rights potential? Where are the best revenue
opportunities? Join buyers, sellers, and filmmakers to
discuss rights, royalties, and windows in the wild
world of digital distribution now. Moderated by Meyer
Shwarzstein, CEO of Brainstorm Media.
For those of you in Toronto there are two free screenings of Garbage coming up at the Revue Cinema (400 Roncesvalles Ave.).
The first screening, tonight (December 3), is at 7pm. It will be hosted by NDP MP Peggy Nash and while it is free optional donation will be accepted for the Redwood Women’s Shelter.
Tonights screening of Garbage! will be followed by KILLER’S PARADISE:
“…directed by Toronto-based Giselle Portenier, uncovers the horrific situation in Guatemala, where 2,000 women have been murdered since 1999 and the perpetrators gone unpunished.”
The second screening free screening at the Revue will be this Sunday, December 9 at 2 PM.
If you have a Facebook account you can find out more at http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=6659550804 otherwise please visit the Revue Cinema home page.
Oakville Councillor and Cinema owner Jeff Knoll is hosting a screening of Garbage on December 12 at 7:30 at Encore Cinemas in Oakville:
“After seven years on council, I think I’ve worked pretty hard to ensure that environmental principles are built into our policies and procedures,” says Knoll. “For example, we introduced Green Bins to Oakville with a pilot project in my ward. Politicians have valuable resources at their fingertips to make changes to legislation, to by-laws. But at some point, people have to realize that conservation depends on the end user and it’s difficult to get people to buy into it.”
Read the full story at http://www.oakvilletoday.ca/news/article/140169
An interview you really should read on Marketing Mojo with With Stephanie Fierman Mark DiMassimo<span of DiMassimo Goldstein and Eric Yaverbaum of Tappening (including it’s connection to Garbage!)
Mark: And by the way, the stuff in the bottle isn’t as well regulated as the stuff that comes out of your tap. Compare what the EPA requires of your tap water to what the FDA looks at in your bottled water. See who makes you feel better about what you’re drinking. But the bottom line is that, on the whole, the water from your tap is healthy for you, healthy for your family and a whole lot healthier for the planet. Take the money you save and put it to good use, if you can.
Eric: That’s also what we’re also trying to do by using a portion of the proceeds from every Tappening bottle sale to promote the documentary you mentioned calledGarbage! The Revolution Starts at Home. Now they are starting to get traffic from our site… and that’s the way you start to bind thousands of people together behind a cause.
Read the whole thing at http://stephaniefierman.com/stephanie-fierman-is-tappening-are-you.php
From yorkregion.com
Garbage lessons not lost on viewers
By: Jessica Young
Keep three months’worth of garbage in your garage. Instead of throwing trash to the curb, pile all that waste and watch it sit and rot.
Sounds like a crazy idea, but the McDonald family of Toronto did just that as the subjects of a new environmental documentary called Garbage! The Revolution Starts At Home, by Toronto filmmaker Andrew Nisker.
Read the full article at http://www.yrng.com/article/61328
The film, officially, premieres tonight and to celebrate writer/director Andrew Nisker had appearances this morning on the CBC’s Metro Morning, City TV’s Breakfast Television and we got a nice write up in today’s Toronto Star. If you want to see the film, you won’t find it in theatres, but you can get a list of upcoming screenings here.