Urbavour: A Startup That Gets City Dwellers To Eat Healthy

You’ve worked hard all day.  You’re tired and have missed the Union Square Green Market. You want to eat healthy but you walk into your local deli or grocery store and once again, some bland take out will do the trick for another night.   But what if you knew that waiting for you at home was a bundle of organic groceries from the City’s green markets or local farms?  That is what Urbavour does.  A startup that gets city dwellers to eat healthy. Continue reading “Urbavour: A Startup That Gets City Dwellers To Eat Healthy”

9,000 Mile Bike Ride Across US to Raise Awareness Of Bullying and Teen Suicide

Bob Votruba, begins a 9,000 mile bike ride around the perimeter of the US today to raise awareness of bullying and adolescent suicide.

Votruba, a father of three and a former contractor from Ohio, began his “kindness” crusade after the 2007 Virginia Tech massacre when Seung-Hui Cho, a Virginia Tech senior, killed 32 kids and wounded 23 others. Feeling helpless he wanted to do something, so he started the organization, One Million Acts of Kindness, as an antidote to the violence that sometimes plagues US campuses and public spaces.

In this ride called, Ring Our Country with Kindness (R.O.C.K.), Votruba hopes to amplify the conversation of teen bullying that can lead kids to feeling hopeless, and in extreme cases, take their own lives.

The ride begins and ends in New York City.

We spoke with him briefly while he was in New York City.  Check out the video and for those who want to learn more, Votruba can be contacted through his website.

 

Legendary Filmmaker, Douglas Trumbull, Kicks Off The BIFF Filmmaker’s Summit And Talks About 4D and The Future Of Cinema

Imagine meeting your friends at the local cineplex for a Saturday night movie, but instead finding yourself at a Cirque du Soleil-like extravaganza.  As you drive to this new auditorium you look around and realize the cineplex, as a building destination, is a relic of the past.  The cineplex is now in your hand.  It’s your iPad or Android.  This new cinema makes each audience member feel as if they are in the movie, a truly immersive experience.  This is the mission of  legendary filmmaker, Douglas Trumbull.

At his home and studio in the Berkshires, Trumbull and his wife, Julia, and a team of film specialists, are working on this new immersive technology.  Trumbull was the first stop on the Berkshire International Film Festival’s Filmmaker’s Summit.

Sarah Patrick Morgese, BIFF Filmmaker’s Summit, Coordinator

Spearheaded by the extraordinarily talented, thoughtful and organized, Sarah Patrick Morgese, the two-day Filmmaker’s Summit, was a mix of field trips to the Berkshires luminous filmmaking and theatrical communities and filmmaker panels for the BIFF participating filmmakers.  In my more than 15 years of attending film festivals, I have never attended a more satisfying, informative and intimate film event.   Check out some of the highlights below.  Also, if you are interested in film, distribution and research, check out our RESOURCES. Continue reading “Legendary Filmmaker, Douglas Trumbull, Kicks Off The BIFF Filmmaker’s Summit And Talks About 4D and The Future Of Cinema”

Bund Tourist Tunnel, Shanghai: A Video Mashup

The Bund Tourist Tunnel takes people from Pudong New Area, the financial district in Shanghai, to the Bund or older center in Puxi, another district in Shanghai.  About four minutes underneath the Huangpu River, the only locals we saw in the tunnel were the ticket takers. Most Shanghaiers take the wifi-friendly and highly efficient subway in a third of the time and a fraction of the price. Continue reading “Bund Tourist Tunnel, Shanghai: A Video Mashup”

Saving Face: Filmmakers On Their Academy Award Winning Film

Filmmakers, Daniel Junge and Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy, spoke to a sold out crowd at New York’s Asia Society, about their 2012 Academy Award winning documentary (short subject), Saving Face.  The film focuses on two women who were the victims of their husband’s acid violence against them. According to the film, about 100 Pakistani women are the victims of acid violence, usually by a husband or family member.  But the situation is not just a Pakistani problem, it’s a global problem, affecting women in the UK, Uganda, India, Cambodia and many other countries. Continue reading “Saving Face: Filmmakers On Their Academy Award Winning Film”

Michelle Yeoh and Luc Besson on The Lady, their film about Burmese Leader, Aung San Suu Kyi

French Director, Luc Bresson, (Le Femme Nikita, Fifth Element) and Actress, Michelle Yeoh, (Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon), were on hand at New York’s Asia Society to screen their film, The Lady, on Burmese Leader, Aung San Suu Kyi.

The film starts with the assassination of Suu Kyis’ father, Aung San, the Burmese democratic leader who ushered in independence from British rule in 1947, the same year he was killed.  It picks up again after she has moved to Oxford, where she lives with her husband and Burmese scholar, Michael Aris, well played by David Thewlis, and their two children. Kyi returns to Rangoon in the early 90’s to care for her ailing mother and bears witness to the violent student crackdown by the military.  She doesn’t leave, and with almost two decades of house arrest and a Nobel Peace Prize, as the saying goes, the rest is history.

The crux of the film centers on the pull between Suu Kyi’s choice to lead her country over choosing to raise her family in Oxford.  Her choice resulted in her not being with her husband on his death bed from prostate cancer in 1999.  If she left Burma, she would never be allowed to return, and the military junta denied Aris’s visa from London.  Aris forbade her to leave.

Besson does his best to stick to the riveting facts of her story.  A Burmese reporter at the post-screening asked why he only focused on the Hollywood-version of her marriage and not the atrocities still inflicted on the Burmese people by the military junta.  Besson said he couldn’t tell that story because he didn’t know it that well, but wanted to focus on the inner conflict within Suu Kyi, and deal with the love of family and country.  It is an effective strategy, and Suu Kyi is wonderfully played by Yeoh.  She embodies the Burmese leader with steely grace and dignity that has earned Suu Kyi the adoration of the her nation and beyond.

Another Besson strategy that anchors the film is that many of the smaller roles were filled with Burmese non-actors.  Filmed in Thailand, the Thai border has a large Burmese refugee camp and over 200 residents from the camps were used.  Suu Kyi’s housekeeper and menacing military guard that keeps her under house arrest are deeply effective.  Besson said the despotic guard who keeps her confined under house arrest is actually a carpenter by day.  He was quite brilliant.

The story lapses into sentimentality but it does make the viewer, especially this one, to want to learn more about Suu Kyi, the history of Burma, and the current situation.  Not a bad result for a Hollywood film.

The Lady will be released in February, and by all means, rent it, download it, pirate it (if you live in Burma because it is illegal there), just make sure you see it.

Although Hillary Clinton was able to visit Suu Kyi this year, and Suu Kyi’s house arrest has been lifted, Besson and Yeoh are cautiously optimistic about her future.  “Her release from house arrest has happened before, but people are still getting killed at the borders,” he said.

To see the full interview, please visit the Asia Society website.

Can’t see it on Vimeo? Watch it on YouTube.

Shanghai Fashionista Dogs Flaunt Pearls, Matching Shoes and Outer Wear for New Year’s Lantern Festival

Conspicuous consumption is everywhere on the streets of Shanghai, China these days.  From the Prada, Chanel and Tiffany megastores to the ubiquitous Starbucks signs and McDonalds motorcycle deliverymen.

Starbucks, Yuyuan Gardens, Shanghai, China

It is hard to fathom this is the same China we associate with the dire poverty from just a few decades ago.  For sure there are the one percenters v. 99-percenters, and there is rural poverty in Western China, (unfortunately these is plenty of rural poverty in the US) but it seems that for some in the Shanghai middle class, things are better. One tiny example of this upward mobility are the clothes these dog owners buy for their beloved pets.   Continue reading “Shanghai Fashionista Dogs Flaunt Pearls, Matching Shoes and Outer Wear for New Year’s Lantern Festival”

Wellesley High School Girls Step Up

Out with the old and in with the new, Wellesley High School, in Wellesley, MA will tear down the old school.  No need to worry that education is going down the tubes in this town.  Wellesley will soon have a state-of-the-art high school right next door.  But before the February demolition, beloved former English teacher, Jeanie Goddard, and community member, Gig Babson, organized a spectacular celebration, Turn Out The Lights, to mark the historic transition.

Wellesley High School, Wellesley MA

Continue reading “Wellesley High School Girls Step Up”