tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-128798272024-03-07T04:54:15.323-05:00alternative films for kidsWelcome to Alternative Films for Kids, a browser's guide to some independent films, classic + world cinema, and animations that will add variety to a Disney-based diet. Not all were produced with children in mind, but all may be enjoyed by children. You will find recommended age ranges in our reviews, but pre-screening for your sensitive young viewer is always best. We highly recommend the nonprofit, Facets Multimedia, for mail rentals.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.comBlogger66125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-5160171459123438392014-08-24T09:01:00.001-04:002014-08-24T09:10:26.255-04:00Boyhood<br />
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEji5WFMwXNzqogVkTp3cpEgWF-xyl4dlXLMKWQwWudLPyVQrEPrzJHstErPEwMtVcbdRw2ot7EAb0X1ySWcQJWtuWZ3coS_Tqu8f3A6unX10sGL4N0iHCeTkIRLSKdThTH386u8rg/s1600/Boyhood_film.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEji5WFMwXNzqogVkTp3cpEgWF-xyl4dlXLMKWQwWudLPyVQrEPrzJHstErPEwMtVcbdRw2ot7EAb0X1ySWcQJWtuWZ3coS_Tqu8f3A6unX10sGL4N0iHCeTkIRLSKdThTH386u8rg/s1600/Boyhood_film.jpg" /></a></div>
Directed by Richard Linklater<br />
Produced by Sandra Adair, Caroline Kaplan, Richard Linklater, Kirsten McMurray, Vincent Palmo Jr., Jonathan Sehring, John Sloss, Cathleen Sutherland, Anne Walker-McBay.<br />
Color, live action, 164 minutes<br />
Teens and up (see below)<br />
<br />
I haven't posted here in a long time because living demands more attention than spectating, but I'm taking time out to plug a movie about, well, living: BOYHOOD. If you've read about it at all, you know that indie director Richard Linklater, whose films often deal with persistence and change through time, cast the lead, Ellar Coltrane, at the age of six. Everyone involved aged 12 years during the making of the movie.<br />
<br />
Aside from that layer adding to what is already a moving chronicle of a family over the last decade, the shooting circumstances and lives of the makers that shadow the film add a level of richness to BOYHOOD that is less palpable, though obviously always present, in other films. Knowing the level of commitment of the ensemble of actors and crew, imagining their collaboration and the many ways the film likely parallels developments in their own lives, and sensing the sadness they must have felt when the shooting stopped, adds to the pondering of love and loss that runs through BOYHOOD. This is most explicit in a scene during which Patricia Arquette, who plays the central character's mother, lectures a psychology class on John Bowlby's attachment theory.<br />
<br />
During a Q+A by producer John Sloss he mentioned that his kids—who are currently the sames ages as the characters Mason and Sam are at the start of BOYHOOD—have only seen that first section. So one way to watch this with kids would be segment by segment as they age. It's a movie to savor and revisit. For those watching it with teens now, while it's still fresh, it's quickly becoming a rite of passage.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-69910704333844207742011-12-13T07:57:00.002-05:002011-12-13T07:58:40.340-05:00Bullfrog Films for ActivistsHere is a press release from Bullfrog Films about a great project; check it out:<br /><br /> <br />Bullfrog Films Launches Groundbreaking Community Screenings Site<br />December 2011<br /> <br />Bullfrog Films, the nation’s leading distributor of films about environmental and related social justice issues, is excited to announce a groundbreaking initiative that brings documentary film to the heart of local and national activism.<br /> <br />Bullfrog Communities (http://www.bullfrogcommunities.com) empowers local organizers and activists by providing screening tools, an online publicity platform and licenses to organize free or for-profit screenings of award-winning new documentaries. Bullfrog Communities also enables organizers and viewers to participate in online campaigns relating to the documentary to further enact change.<br /> <br />"Film is uniquely capable of bringing an audience simultaneously up to speed on any given issue, and organizers can take advantage of that moment to open up an informed discussion of critical social issues in their community and, importantly, to take concerted action," said John Hoskyns-Abrahall, president of Bullfrog Films, founder of Bullfrog Communities.<br /> <br />One of the unusual features of Bullfrog Communities is that the screening license allows organizers to charge admission and to keep the proceeds from the screenings. So, in addition to the shared educational experience that only film can provide, a community screening can be an inexpensive, ready-made and attractive fundraiser for local groups.<br /> <br />Each film’s website provides a screening and discussion guide that details how to put on a successful screening; a list of suggested questions for the Q&A following the film; and a handout with links to resources and suggestions for further action.<br /> <br />The website features an expanding group of online communities built around different issues such as food, water, energy & climate change, civil liberties, and economic justice. Each issue area features a growing number of films plus a news feed and an ongoing discussion of the issue and of screenings nationwide. In this way the lessons learned from successful screenings in one community can be transferred to another.<br /> <br />Go to http://www.bullfrogcommunities.com to sign up and start the discussion going on the most pressing issue in your community! JOIN Bullfrog Communities to be alerted when new films are released for community screenings.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-16088624732650750592010-10-27T00:15:00.005-04:002010-10-27T00:39:17.530-04:00The 8½ FoundationTonight, while Googling Tilda Swinton, I discovered that in 2005—coincidentally the year I began Alternative Films for Kids—she co-founded The 8½ Foundation, a nonprofit whose "aim is to create a new birthday: a film birthday, at the age of 8½, that celebrates the power of cinema to expand children’s horizons and welcomes children into the wider world of movies, beyond what is normally available to them at the multiplex or on their TV screens." <br /><br />They have a <a href="http://eightandahalf.org/recommended_films">wonderful list of recommended films</a>, many of which are here, many more of which are not (I'm slow, and busy, and don't spend as much time expanding this list as I'd like). Check it out.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-10111065585711566912009-07-16T14:09:00.005-04:002009-07-16T14:28:31.368-04:00Stop Lookin', ListenThis blog focuses on visual media for children that I, in my infinite personal bias, would say falls outside the mainstream. Truth is, my kids spend more time listening to audio books (and reading), than watching, and I think that's a good thing. Limiting sensory input to one channel often deepens the waters.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgQGt0KtwGaBB24zMX4ecH-G3-L51VYWSdOFQpggZYT8_6DM3Lx2Z3-bvqBK61cgBfqR0CLMYtRTu96-p4XOYii-1hKVbFysr26d99LpfP9li0AFXdsl3VTQXvFC4TQcvv9YMLvGA/s1600-h/rocket.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 135px; height: 96px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgQGt0KtwGaBB24zMX4ecH-G3-L51VYWSdOFQpggZYT8_6DM3Lx2Z3-bvqBK61cgBfqR0CLMYtRTu96-p4XOYii-1hKVbFysr26d99LpfP9li0AFXdsl3VTQXvFC4TQcvv9YMLvGA/s320/rocket.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5359124800669761842" /></a>This brings me to a plug for the short-story podcasts of <i>The New Yorker</i>. I've been listening to them during downtime lately, and this week I had to pull my kids into my bedroom to have a listen to Jonathan Franzen reading "Coyote v. Acme" by Ian Frazier. Frazier's parody of a legal brief, contrasting the formal, deflective language of legalese and the slapstick antics of the famous Warner Bros. cartoons is deft, hilarious, and affectionate. My children greatly enjoyed it. <br /><br />Another good one for children (8+up, I'd say) is George Saunders reading "You Must Know Everything," by Isaac Babel. There's plenty to explore in the free podcast area of iTunes, from Selected Shorts and This American Life to more independent efforts—a free library for a rainy day or long car trip.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-72711734075410859122009-06-16T21:40:00.002-04:002009-06-16T22:36:11.197-04:00What's On Your Plate?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDuXWSnF3MrCV59pqoZuIu3RIxHXBi_FDzG0nZx-hsHsVWczTDUbAh1cJ9VofHqDlfLzD_ApUQk9MVtac5110TWrM_ENFCYWn1I5MsHoQ9FoBbJjUoNM9WQ73reG939qYfTJ_igQ/s1600-h/woyp.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 200px; height: 150px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDuXWSnF3MrCV59pqoZuIu3RIxHXBi_FDzG0nZx-hsHsVWczTDUbAh1cJ9VofHqDlfLzD_ApUQk9MVtac5110TWrM_ENFCYWn1I5MsHoQ9FoBbJjUoNM9WQ73reG939qYfTJ_igQ/s320/woyp.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5348119463290260914" /></a>Directed by Catherine Gund<br />Produced by Tanya Selvaratnam<br />Co-produced by Sadie Rain Hope-Gund and Safiyah Kai Russell Riddle <br />With animation by Hubbub Inc.: Emily Hubley and Jeremiah Dickey<br />Color, documentary, 73 minutes<br />All ages<br /><br />Upcoming screening:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.bam.org/view.aspx?pid=1219">BAM Cinemafest/Afro-Punk Opening Night Outdoor Screening</a><br />Saturday, June 27th, 6:00 pm<br /><br />I show my kids a lot of documentaries—more than they want to see, frankly. So when I pulled What's On Your Plate? out of the envelope and said, "It's about food!" my son put on his blah face. "I've seen a ton of that stuff. I know." He's used to home cooking, CSAs, the backyard garden (even if a groundhog has kept it from coming up this year), he knows everything there is to know about healthy eating. But when the rest of the family popped it in and started watching, he came in and got hooked.<br /><br />Co-produced and 'hosted' by two 7th-grade girls, Sadie and Safiyah, who live and eat in New York City, What's On Your Plate? welcomes a kids-eye view of food politics. School lunches, family farming, the mystery treat "Funyuns," and diet-related diseases are some of the topics, but the 'girl guides' leading the exploration, Sadie and Safiyah, bring humor and energy that keep the material from being dry or didactic, and so do their lively interview subjects—chefs, food activists, and farmers. Director Gund has no wish to feed us a lot of talking heads—she'd rather follow the girls as they amble through the city, visit the Angels, a Mexican farming family, or select cucumbers at their CSA. You get to watch people eat a lot. And Sadie and Safiyah don't shrink from asking the heads of food for NYC schools why Snapple is considered a suitable beverage to be serving kids from machines. "They don't have to drink it," one says.<br /><br />I think one reason my kids found What's On Your Plate? interesting is that it talks about what happens when the food we see being grown around us—in Ulster County, two hours north of the city—reaches New York City. How do city residents get to know farmers? How does farm-fresh food get distributed to schools? How do people go about changing what's on their plate?nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-84771570900549344882009-05-23T04:00:00.006-04:002009-05-28T17:46:43.395-04:00The Curious Adventures of Mr. Wonderbird<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEilb1hQt3HECbVDiAOjT_iNq3ZD2Oz_Jlfzv4sOnny3uS2tDJ3KlPa_24Ihe8Bq3GtC3LShapYMdFiHWPRGsZpLrGZJHQI142UbzxULnhWnNVO_vlDMlVpKJuWuwQNAwDicomqkpg/s1600-h/leroietloiseau1.png"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 244px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEilb1hQt3HECbVDiAOjT_iNq3ZD2Oz_Jlfzv4sOnny3uS2tDJ3KlPa_24Ihe8Bq3GtC3LShapYMdFiHWPRGsZpLrGZJHQI142UbzxULnhWnNVO_vlDMlVpKJuWuwQNAwDicomqkpg/s320/leroietloiseau1.png" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5338936373159165698" /></a><br />Available (and preferable) in French as <i>Le Roi et l'Oiseau</i><br />Directed by Paul Grimault<br />Produced by André Sarrut<br />Color, animation, 63 minutes<br />Based on "The Sheperdess and the Chimney Sweep," by Hans Christian Andersen, adapted by Grimault and Jacques Prévert<br />Recommended for 8 and up<br /><br />Astonishing for its inventiveness and surrealism, this odd and striking story may not be embraced by every child but is sure to give moments of delight. It goes by several titles and is available in both French and English; in this version, the title character, a despot-defying bird (who happens to be a doting single dad), is voiced hilariously by Peter Ustinov. A tyrant king, living in a castle high above his subjects, is in love with the portrait of a shepherdess, who comes to life from a painting. She and her true love, a chimney sweep, escape into a deserted city (picture Venice painted by de Chirico), and are then trapped in an underground kingdom where the king's subjects live without birds or sunlight. Full of surprises, amusements, and stunning animation. Apparently some have picked this gem up for a buck at WalMart, but greatly preferable: order the director's version, LE ROI ET L'OISEAU from <a href="http://www.amazon.fr/">Amazon.fr</a>. The story easily survives a lack of subtitling, and kids deserve to see this level of cinematic art in the version intended by the creators. A few caveats: the king, who is both an object of fun and creepy, shoots bird for sport (though we don't see him kill one) and destroys his city with a giant waldo; there are moments of peril for major characters and the king dispenses with minor ones by pushing a button so they disappear through the floor or by having them flung aside by his robotic henchman. This is available in the English version on VHS from <a href="http://www.facetsmovies.com/">Facets</a> for mail rental.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-56040671474971101342009-05-21T23:11:00.008-04:002009-05-28T17:39:52.203-04:00Star TrekThe buzz was up about STAR TREK 2009. Good for kids, good story, very moving. My kids are now 12 and nearly 10, and maybe because they're a bit older now, tweens in fact, I talked them into going. My husband read me the review from <a href="http://www.kids-in-mind.com/">Kids-in-Mind</a>, but no red flags. Violence and gore got a 6 rating from them—compare to the 7 rating given PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN, which my kids saw over a year ago.<br /><br />Besides, a younger friend of theirs had gone, and people were saying it's fine for kids.<br /><br />Whoa, was I mistaken. Neither one of them liked the violence, the volume, the velocity—the three off-putting Vs of PG13dom. I don't know how Kids-in-Mind decided to rate the violence at 6. How could a man bound to a table to be tortured, a large insect forced down his throat, rate a 6? What kind of torture gets a 10? It feels like the world is getting less sensitive, but I'm becoming more grateful for my children's sensitivity. <br /><br />My son is a particular fan of the MPAA ratings system—he even has it tacked to his bedroom wall. Because of him I've adjusted my attitude toward ratings. When I was single and living in New York, I once interviewed the director Abel Ferrara and recall his outrage that his teenage son might be prohibited from seeing whatever movie he liked. From his point-of-view it was a self-expression issue, and I agreed.<br /><br />For my son, it's a self-protection issue. He values the ratings system because he's not ready for sexual themes, he doesn't like seeing cruelty, especially if it's aimed at animals, and Hollywood movies tend to overwhelm him with their explosions, constant orchestral climaxing, and endless chase sequences. He's the one sitting through the previews with his fingers in his ears.<br /><br />Another reason my kids didn't go in for STAR TREK is that they lack the allegiance, formed over decades, to the series that my husband and I have. While we are not Trekkers, I for one spent a good deal of my youth with the crew of the Enterprise. Naturally I paid close attention to the women, the few there were: Nurse Christine Chapel, Yeoman Janice Rand, and the biggie: Lt. Uhura.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgElHHNtyq-NpLWI7QEyjHlFzc8M6cO0pf5q1n0FrQ1lgAW1zkr9GE66238PbXz3Ysv1njKlHCkDHR6KzRP68LEC7uOwv00_-o0eGKu04w0uAxKTbEjCUyOXsS4yI5OVDTHRv9yrA/s1600-h/uhura1.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 227px; height: 298px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgElHHNtyq-NpLWI7QEyjHlFzc8M6cO0pf5q1n0FrQ1lgAW1zkr9GE66238PbXz3Ysv1njKlHCkDHR6KzRP68LEC7uOwv00_-o0eGKu04w0uAxKTbEjCUyOXsS4yI5OVDTHRv9yrA/s320/uhura1.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5338492887062158482" /></a>Uhura and the actor who played her, Nichelle Nichols, carry a lot of cultural heft. Nichols was one of the first Black women on a TV series not to play a domestic worker (Diahann Carol in the 1968 <i>Julia</i> was another trailblazer I watched without quite understanding, but maybe intuiting, the import—I was seven that year). An episode in which she kissed William Shatner broke a barrier. After the first season, she thought of quitting, but Martin Luther King, Jr. persuaded her to stay on, citing the impact she was having.<br /><br />Her character never rose to the prominence many viewers would have liked, and struggled in relative obscurity even when STAR TREK crossed into feature film territory.<br /><br />But it still shocked me, though maybe it shouldn't have, to see how little the capable Zoe Saldana has to work with in the new STAR TREK. While her brethren are given <a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifCiSAhCnE4jz_-aSDr5w5-GrL1uGDTOZvX6mvNW-CAqzrRO6l27z3-VGIoo4BPkk-ZjnoS6ZVVbRBKVTfEdz22SjAw7hoa2tN3x3N_gp9jXfn42Xmcuy_Qrcsjb-dyKjXt7aFOw/s1600-h/uhura2.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 320px; height: 177px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEifCiSAhCnE4jz_-aSDr5w5-GrL1uGDTOZvX6mvNW-CAqzrRO6l27z3-VGIoo4BPkk-ZjnoS6ZVVbRBKVTfEdz22SjAw7hoa2tN3x3N_gp9jXfn42Xmcuy_Qrcsjb-dyKjXt7aFOw/s320/uhura2.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5338493103304214562" /></a>emotionally rich origin stories to add depth to their relationships, she is left with a gag about her first name and a running sex joke about her professional field of linguistics. It's implied that she wants to serve on the Enterprise in order to be near her boyfriend, Spock. Gone is the dignity of the TV version of Uhura, who once came upon a shipmate and began speaking Swahili with him (too bad he turned out to be a monster in disguise). I will never forget sitting in my suburban living room listening to Swahili and thinking it the most beautiful language I'd ever heard.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-85649202121548189102009-04-10T09:19:00.004-04:002009-04-10T09:38:39.509-04:00FLOW: For Love of Water<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/flow.png" align="left" style="margin:2em">2008, color documentary, 93 minutes<br />Directed by Irena Salina<br />Produced by Steven Starr<br />8 and up<br /><br /><br /><br />Salina's documentary views the global water crisis through the eyes of activists struggling for access to clean, free water. The stories told here are fairly easy to follow for 8 and up, and kids used to seeing plastic bottles of 'blue gold' for sale everywhere really ought to hear this side of things. Activist/thinkers Vandana Shiva and Maude Barlow figure prominently in this narrative of an essential question of our time: can nature—the very elements of life—be owned? Or are they aspects of the worldwide commons, our birthright, what we share and steward together?<br /><br />In the Hudson Valley, this film is making the rounds as a fundraiser for water-related issues such as those raised in Rosendale,NY by <a href="http://savethelakes.us/">Save the Lakes</a>.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-28108007740851404182009-01-15T22:14:00.003-05:002009-01-17T18:24:03.969-05:00Preview + Review of Long-Awaited CORALINE<i>CORALINE is scheduled for release to theaters on February 6, 2009.</i><br /><br /><img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/coraline.jpg" align="left" style="margin:2em">My son Ray has been making movies since he was six: stop motion animation, live action, and lately, CGI parodies of <i>Star Wars</i>. He reads film production books and bios of animators like Chuck Jones, and loves ‘making-of’ bonus features and little biopics about revered figures like Ray Harryhausen. One of his ‘mentors’ is Henry Selick, who has just completed his adaptation (for 3D stop-motion animation) of Neil Gaiman’s novel, <i>Coraline</i>. <br /><br />It was our enormous good fortune—mine, my son’s, my daughter’s, my husband’s, and his mother’s—to visit the set of <i>Coraline</i> a couple of years ago, and a real treat to see a preview screening of the finished work the other night in Manhattan, with Henry Selick on hand to answer audience questions.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/ray3D.JPG" align="left" style="margin:2em">Ray, who is 11, wasn’t sure he wanted to see what he called a ‘horror’ movie. His 9-year-old sister, who acts in most of his movies and in her own monologue-driven shorts, was firm: she wouldn’t go to the screening. The monstrous Other Mother of the previews, and the prospect of having her lunge from the screen, were horrors they could live without.<br /><br />So, Ray and I headed into NYC with the plan that he would shut his eyes, pull his jacket up over his face, and hold his hands to his ears if it all got to be too much. He was willing to endure, if only for the Q&A portion of the evening.<br /><br />As it turns out, he didn’t have to worry too much. He only shut his eyes once, and not for long. While the idea of <i>Coraline</i> is truly terrifying—a girl is left alone to rescue her supernaturally abducted parents—its creators have allowed the idea to carry most of the weight of emotion, as with the best fairy tales, and haven’t piled onto it with 3D shock effects or long, anxiety-provoking suspense sequences. <i>The Nightmare Before Christmas</i>, with its cast of characters in varying states of decomposition, is more horrific—at least to me, and I think my son, who got to an age where he felt too uneasy to watch it, and wouldn’t go near the undead-dominated <i>Corpse Bride</i>, would agree.<br /><br />Henry Selick has done a beautiful job of reconceptualizing the novel for the screen and for stop motion. From the first moments, when metal hands sew up a doll-sized version of the title character and cast her into a void, it feels like this is a movie partly about the animator and the animator’s art. These are the hands of the evil Other Mother, creator and destroyer of the Other World, but here they are, bare of fleshly trappings, primordial armature. We come to find that the energy of children is what makes the Other Mother’s material other world, and it is their life force that makes it beautiful, whimsical, and inviting. <br /><br />If you have watched any of the featurettes about <i>Coraline</i>, you have seen artist after artist toiling and tinkering away, as artists always do on these projects, though now, with the Internet, in less obscurity. They can even blog about their work for Laika Studios. It’s hard to watch that image of armature hands making the Coraline doll and not think of all the human hands that have gone into the making of this supremely hand-made movie, and seeing in these moments a tribute to them all (certainly they deserve a tribute, including those several dozen Laika workers, I was sorry to read, who were recently laid off).<br /><br />OtherMotherWorld is especially fanciful and so packed with detail it's hard to imagine not seeing the movie many times to try to take it all in. Henry S. has ensured that the Other Mother’s overture to Coraline is suitably seductive. She—and we—are truly tempted to stay and sample more delights from the animators’ cabinet of wonders. (And the wonders really are wonderful; we laughed throughout the early other world scenes.)<br /><br />Henry Selick’s Other Mother is a kind of ‘50s fantasy mom—she cooks brilliantly in heels, perfect make-up, and manicure and wears a stainless, starched apron. Other Father is affable, doting, and fun (aside from the saucy, riotous French and Saunders as the Misses Spink and Forcible, my favorite vocal performance is John Hodgman's as the Fathers Real and Other). <br /><br />Coraline's real world parents, by contrast, are familiar to us as contemporary, overworked telecommuters (fortunate in that sense, they write at home on gardening) who share the work of their life equally, don’t exactly excel in the kitchen, and don’t have much time for their daughter.<br /><br />That Coraline's creativity will rival the Other Mother's is intimated by a lovely scene that is not in Neil Gaiman’s book. Having returned from an early foray into the other world, Coraline finds her apartment empty; her parents have not come home from work and grocery shopping. Newly arrived in a strange place, friendless and now abandoned by her parents, she goes to bed alone, making pillow-people versions of her mom and dad to comfort herself—the Other Mother isn't the only one who can conjure power from a doll. I think Coraline's realization that they're not coming back is the scariest moment in the story (though Gaiman's protagonist is pretty brave at this point, as I recall). Henry S. wisely lingers long enough for us to feel her loneliness and her sadness.<br /><br />A resourceful adventurer who is, like too few movie protagonists—even at the dawn of the 21st century—a girl, <i>Coraline</i> would be perfect if not for Henry S.’s addition of a boy to come to her aid in her time of need. Or so I thought when I heard about him. But Wybie (nicknamed "Why Be Born" by Coraline—I guess Henry S. knew some of us would resist), who gives Coraline someone other than a (really cool) cat to dialog with, adds a melancholy element to the other world, where he is more expressive for his muteness. <br /><br />When my son and I came back up the Hudson River the day after the screening, and made our report to his sister, she said, “I think I’ve changed my mind. I do want to see <i>Coraline</i>.” I look forward to seeing it again with her.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/henryselickin3D.JPG" align="left" style="margin:2em">We were too shy to ask for a shot of Henry S. with Ray, but here he is after the Q&A. Be sure to view through your 3D glasses.<br /><br />I'll be blogging more thought on <i>Coraline</i> on my other blog, <a href="http://oswegatchie.blogspot.com/">Oswegatchie</a>. Look for the <i>Coraline</i> tag.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-83611638704077473002008-08-26T09:42:00.004-04:002008-08-26T09:57:08.734-04:00Children of Heaven (Bacheha-Ye aseman)<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/childrenofheaven.jpg" align=left> 1997, color feature, 88 minutes<br />Directed and written by Majid Majidi<br />Producer, Amir Esfandiari, Mohammad Esfandiari <br />In Persian with subtitles<br />All ages<br /><br />This Iranian film centers on a brother and sister forced to share a pair of sneakers when the boy Ali (played beautifully by Amir Farrokh Hashemian) loses his sister Zahra's newly-repaired shoes. A meditation on Iranian daily life (including scenes at a mosque), scarcity vs. plenty, and family bonds, Children of Heaven is also a suspenseful yarn. Its PG rating, as near as I can figure, has to do with Ali's father yelling "shit!" when his bicycle breaks stop working and he and his son are about to crash. Also, he is verbally harsh with his family, particularly at the beginning, but it quickly becomes clear that he is honest and loving, if overworked. Engaging, stunning to look at, a glimpse at Iranian culture that has a realistic feel. I'm giving this the "girl power" label because Ali's sister Zahra, played by Bahare Seddiqi, washes the dishes, tends the baby, cleans the house, and gets her homework done—one could imagine such a girl growing up to be a world leader.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-88503218445131649472008-06-26T21:58:00.008-04:002008-07-11T10:04:53.394-04:00Chisholm '72: Unbought and Unbossed<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/chisholm.jpg" align=left><br />Shola Lynch, 2004<br />76 minutes, documentary<br />Best for ages 5+<br /><br />I was 11 in 1972 when Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm became the first woman and first black person to run as successfully as she did for president of the United States, and my son is 11 now. Watching this documentary with him and my 9-year-old daughter really put this year's campaign in perspective. The footage here demonstrates some of the long road that has led to Barack Obama's candidacy, reveals by contrast the shallowness of the media analysis of race and gender in the current campaign, and offers a refreshing, even bracing introduction to a candidate who was not afraid to speak out and take strong, clear, progressive positions. "I want to be remembered as a woman who dared to be a catalyst for change," said Chisholm. A great introduction to a figure your children should know about (even if they don't understand all of it), a primer in issues that come up in every campaign, and some good context related to the movements for the rights of women and African-Americans.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-4452428636333604942008-05-16T06:02:00.003-04:002008-05-16T06:18:27.445-04:00Cyrano de Bergerac<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/cyrano.jpg" align=left>Jean-Paul Rappeneau, 1990<br />137 minutes, color feature, subtitles<br />Ages 8 & up (battle scene at end with explosions and some blood)<br /><br />With musketeers, witty word play, a confederacy of poets, and a story about who and why we love, the story of Cyrano de Bergerac is great for kids. This production features a spirited, soulful performance by Gerard Depardieu. Another great actor, José Ferrer, made a version in 1950 and there are numerous other versions. My 8-year-old had a little trouble keeping up with the subtitles, but there is plenty of action to keep a non-reading viewer interested, and those who don't follow the subtitles can still listen to the music of the rhyming couplets in French. Girl power alert: Roxanne, love object to two men, has little to do but in Act IV does dress up as a man during a fight with Spanish soldiers and sneak food to the French cadets.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-10270301529900827392008-05-13T16:47:00.003-04:002008-05-13T17:05:04.987-04:00Note by Note: The Making of Steinway L1037<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/notebynote.jpg"align=left>Ben Niles, 2007<br />81 minutes, color documentary shot on tape<br />All ages<br /><br />Anyone old enough to sit through a documentary, and that could be anybody, should be rapt at this account of the process and people behind a Steinway grand piano, from the multinational craftspeople who painstakingly ply their trade in a Queens factory, passing their art down from one generation to the other through hands-on training, to the musicians who appreciate in their own way the personality differences between one piano and another. "It was nice to see the Steinway being made—spray-painted and having its strings straightened," said a 10-year-old viewer.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-24414476392135818042007-05-22T09:31:00.000-04:002007-05-22T10:11:04.950-04:00Word Play<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/wordplay.jpg" align=left>Patrick Creadon, 2006 <br />94 minutes, color documentary<br />7 and up, rated PG for mild reasons detailed in the review of this movie at <a href="http://www.kids-in-mind.com/w/wordplay.htm">Kids-in-Mind</a> <br /><br />Using NPR puzzlemaster and New York Times puzzle editor Will Shortz as a focal personality, this documentary is all about crosswords, those who make them and those who complete them—in well under five minutes, every week and at an annual competition held in Connecticut since 1975. Kids should enjoy the story of how Shortz, at a young age, determined to spend his life with puzzles and created his own college major—enigmatology—to prepare himself for his chosen vocation. Others will be amused by the longstanding rule of etiquette that prevents anything remotely scatological from being used in a crossword, a state of affairs that vexes puzzle constructors in need of vowel-rich words like "enema". The DVD comes with lots of bonus features for extra fun that should inspire a run on crossword books at your house.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-72201181894892329152007-04-18T15:05:00.000-04:002007-04-18T15:51:18.894-04:00Women. We'll Settle for Half.<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/seejane.jpg" align=left>That's the official t-shirt of an organization called <a href="http://www.seejane.org/">See Jane</a>, founded by Geena Davis to correct the remarkable continuing disparity between male and female characters in programming aimed at young people. Incredibly, the entertainment industry needs more studies and data to convince it that girls, and female smurf-like characters and animals and so forth, are still largely missing from the sewage system that is mass media. Such activities keep the Annenberg School in business, I suppose, but sheesh, we all know TV and movies are male-dominated stories told from male perspectives with a pink bow slapped on here and there, and rather frequently a dead mother, to make us shed a tear. What a crushing bore! If it weren't for the exceptions, many of them celebrated right here at Alternative Films for Kids, we'd give up. But the exceptions shine so gloriously that we, like the good people at See Jane, prefer to keep pushing for improvement. Davis spoke about See Jane recently at the National Conference for Media Reform. (After watching <a href="http://www.freepress.net/conference/=video07">Geena</a>, have a look at the amazing keynote by Bill Moyers).<br /><br />More good news for girls: Henry Selick is now in production with an animated screen adaptation of Neil Gaiman's <a href="http://www.laika.com/entertainment/index.php?m=bookmark&g=projects&c=coraline">Coraline</a>. This is a story about a girl. That's it! No boy sidekick, no brother, and very few male characters to distract from the strength, determination and loving maturity of the girl who travels to the dark side on a rescue mission and finds her way back again—without a Frodo, a Skywalker, a Buzz Lightyear or a Sully to help her.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-35524334126642239342007-04-10T13:51:00.000-04:002007-04-10T14:22:13.913-04:00Musik und Zaubereien & Märchen und Fabeln<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/B0007MSOPO.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_AA180_.jpg" align=left>250 minutes, released 2007<br /><br /><img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/B0007MSOPE.01._SCLZZZZZZZ_AA240_.jpg">150 minutes, rel. 2006<br />Lotte Reiniger<br />Black & white shorts compiled on DVDs<br />All ages<br /><br />If you've seen <i>The Adventures of Prince Achmed</i> (scroll down, it's there somewhere), you and your children will no doubt be delighted that more of the work of Lotte Reiniger, the brilliant German animator who lived from 1899 to 1981, is available on DVD. The delicate silhouettes, in black & white, tinted, and in color (though they're best with the more muted backgrounds), enchant in these versions of popular fairy tales such as "The Golden Goose," "Cinderella" (note for younger viewers: the sister slices off her heel and makes a bloody mess!) and "Jack in the Beanstalk." <i>Musik und Zaubereien</i> gives us a <i>Magic Flute</i> with the best bits of Papageno—as he sings, women turn to birds and fly away, eggs hatch to reveal Papageno & Papagena's babies. "Carmen" has a happy ending and a feminist spirit that infuses many of Reiniger's short films. Hours of stunning animation here, mostly suitable for all ages. These may be hard to rent but can be ordered from Amazon.de—I was surprised to find that my U.S. account and password transferred without a hitch.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-5524407179198022272007-04-09T18:23:00.000-04:002007-04-10T17:47:02.732-04:00The Way Things Go<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/way.jpg" align=left>Peter Fischli & David Weiss, 1987<br />color, 30 minutes<br />All ages<br /><br />"Everyday objects doing cool things," is how my daughter described this chain of events set off by a spinning garbage bag. Foam, fire, explosions, liquids and wheels, a bit of physics and chemistry, and you have thirty minutes of ooh-ing and ah-ing. Delightfully, this film is ultimately about story, and children will love being the narrator, but they should spend at least one viewing listening. The Honda ad, "Cog," that purloined the concept and ideas from this film inspires awe too, but the original is more fun—longer, messier, and the objects have more personality.<br />Highly recommended for all ages.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-18812045644595045632007-03-15T17:38:00.000-04:002007-03-15T17:58:17.711-04:00Alternative Videos of Woodstock CLOSEDTheir name was already outdated, as they were replacing tapes with DVDs. So is our other local store, Alice in Videoland. "Alternative DVDs of Woodstock" and "Alice in DVDland" sure don't sound too poetic, but they wouldn't have lasted long anyway.<br /><br />Members filed into the store at noon to pick over the stock. Hard choices. My son and I wound up with a bag full—a Scooby Doo tape, Cirque de Soleil and an episode of Ghost Writer (scored by a family friend) for him. For me and the rest of the family:<br /><br />Documentaries: The Wobblies, Sister Helen (I thought it was about Helen Prejean; it's not; I hope it's good), Kilowatt Ours, In the Mirror of Maya Deren, Yours for a Song: The Women of Tin Pan Alley; Cinema Verite: Defining the Moment<br />Animation: Hiroshima No Pika; The Adventures of Prince Achmed (scroll down for the altfilmskids review)<br />Features: I Know Where I'm Going, Alexander Nevsky, Last Year at Marienbad<br />Compilations: America's First Women Filmmakers; Treasures from the American Film Archives <br />Performance: Great Pas de Deux for the ballet dancer in the family.<br /><br />I didn't take the best stuff there but what I did get took two hours of standing in line at lunch hour and it was hard to choose.<br /><br />I ran into four friends there and chatted with strangers. The woman next to me on line and I praised Tilda Swinton's performance in Deep End and discussed other films about motherhood. Another woman held up Black Stallion and said the opening was one of her favorite films, with which I heartily concur. Another woman bought every episode of The L Word. It was like a funeral—nice to be with people but for such a sad occasion, with all our favorite store employees pacing the aisles behind the counter to match empty boxes with tapes and discs. This is one of those stores where the staff is learned, like librarians, not like the vapid crew at Blockbuster, where you go in and ask for Meet Me in St. Louis and the kid has never heard of Vincent Minelli. This is a real loss to the community, and you probably have a similar story in progress in your town. <br /><br />I wish everyone at Alternative Video a future of luminous endeavors.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-1170367495541082552007-02-01T16:51:00.000-05:002007-03-15T17:59:19.844-04:00Masters of Russian Animation, Vol. 1<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/B00004S89F.01._AA240_SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg" align=left>Various directors, 2000<br />Animated, Color, Subtitled, 133 minutes<br />All ages<br /><br />Films included: The Story of One Crime (1962), The Man in the Frame (1966), My Green Crocodile (1966), There Lived Kozyavin (1966), Mountain of Dinosaurs (1967), Passion of Spies (1967), Glass Harmonica (1968), Ball of Wool (1968), Singing Teacher (1968), Film Film Film (1968).<br /><br />A compendium of Russian shorts from the 60s produced in a variety of animation styles. Especially recommended: Vadim Kuchevsky's sweet, lyrical <i>My Green Crocodile</i>, done in stop motion; Nikolai Serebryakov's <i>Ball of Wool</i> about an old woman who knits herself a house from the wool of a magic sheep and is undone by her own greed, also stop-motion; and Anatoly Petrov's humorous <i>Singing Teacher</i>, done in pencil drawings, in which a hippopotamus tries warbling.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-1165938051280978842006-12-12T10:23:00.000-05:002007-03-15T18:00:25.298-04:00You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/i_howardzinn.jpg" align=left >Deb Ellis and Dennis Mueller, 2004<br />color and b+w documentary, 78 minutes<br />Ages 9? & up<br /><br />Resident 9-year-old says, "Well, I enjoyed it, but I think most kids would be restless and would rather watch a horrible crappy movie called <i>The Wild</i> instead of this." (Um, we didn't see <i>The Wild</i>.)<br /><br />It ain't for nothing that you're parked at Alternative Films for Kids, folks!<br /><br />This profile of professor/activist Howard Zinn, author of <i>The People's History of the United States</i> (which has sold a million copies), covers his adult life, which has spanned many of the key social and peace movements of our time. Ellis and Mueller track Zinn from his labor activism to his experience in the air force to his days as a Civil Rights leader at Spelman College to his peace activism during the Vietman War—and beyond. This is a great way for kids too young to read <i>A People's History</i> to learn some people's history—through the life of an engaged historian who continues to work for social justice.<br /><br />Definitely not <i>The Wild</i>.<br /><br />Note: contains some graphic archival footage of American police brutalizing demonstrators, bombs dropping during WWII and Vietnam, and Vietnamese civilians under attack.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-1165936747580881022006-12-12T09:57:00.002-05:002011-11-11T09:08:46.384-05:00Whale Rider (in Maori: Te kaieke tohora)<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/215518.jpg" align=left>Niki Caro, 2003<br />color feature, 101 minutes<br />Rated PG-13<br />Could be ok for ages 5 & up but prescreen it and judge for yourself!<br /><br />I had to wait a few years to show my 7-year-old daughter this amazing tale of a girl who turns life around for everyone in her New Zealand Maori village, because the conflict that drives the story—her grandfather's rejection of her leadership because she is a girl—is so unsettling and sexism is a complex topic. Keisha Castle-Hughes is perfect as Paikea, a girl born into a long line of male chiefs in a society drifting away from its roots. The PG-13 rating seems to come from fly-by uses of d*** and b******, but the real caution is the harshness of grandfather, played beautifully by Rawiri Paratene, who requires a miracle to convince him of the rightness in his family line. This is a story of love among family, community, ancestors and planet that defies gender expectations all around.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-1164144565367852832006-11-21T16:14:00.000-05:002007-03-15T18:01:33.912-04:00A Wrinkle in Time<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/t49789l5r4c.jpg" align=left>John Kent Harrison, 2003<br />color feature, 128 minutes<br />This Canadian adaptation of Madeleine L'Engle's classic would surely not have been as compelling had it been made in the States, where one never finds this much feminism packed into two-hour movies, particularly for children. We have a teenage girl protagonist/hero, three cosmic beings led by Alfre Woodard as Mrs. Whatsit representing Divine Love, a worm-like being with a masculine face representing God-the-Authoritarian-Father, and a very human father too injured to be the one to rescue his young son. Kate Nelligan as Mrs. Which and Alison Elliott as Mrs. Who, a family in which both parents are Ph.D.'s, Aunt Beast (yes! even a Wookie-like monster is female!—this one with magical healing powers) round out this experience of non-stop woman power. Brava! Every kid should see this; my kids have rented it twice; recommended for 7 or 8 and up.<br />Hollywood please take a lesson from our neighbors to the north.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-1161640834640961222006-10-23T17:42:00.000-04:002007-03-15T18:02:15.628-04:00Beckett on Film<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/beckett.gif" align=left>19 plays, four DVDs<br />Various directors, 2002<br />Produced by Michael Colgan and Alan Moloney<br />Age 6 and up<br /><br />A couple of years ago my children created a drama in which they pretended to leave home with picnic lunches, traveled in a circle on a sofa for a while, and then began to sink in quicksand while trying to eat. "This is just like Beckett," I thought to myself. In the years since, they've become fans of Buster Keaton and the leap to Beckett is a natural one. <i>Beckett on Film</i> offers the perfect opportunity to explore his plays with your youngster, with directors like David Mamet and Atom Egoyan and actors including John Gielgud, Jeremy Irons, Kristin Scott-Thomas, Juliet Stevenson, & John Hurt. As we view the discs, I'll share our recommendations. They can be rented one at a time, at least from Netflix. <br /><br />Disc 2: Includes "Krapp's Last Tape," "What Where," "Footfalls," "Come and Go" and "Act Without Words I." I recommend trying anything on this disc. My daughter watched all of "Krapp's Last Tape," while my son got bored during the second half—but they both loved the slapstick, which included John Hurt slipping on a banana peel. They both liked the silent "Act Without Words I." My son watched "Footfalls" twice, which I found somewhat surprising, but you never know, which is why anything appropriate and worth viewing, is worth trying with kids. Disc 4: "Act Without Words II," "Rockaby" and "Play" are recommended. "Play" has a few bad words but the characters, who are sitting in urns and brilliantly played by Juliet Stephenson, Alan Rickman and Kristen Scott-Thomas, speak very fast. The other two discs are less compelling to kids, I'd say.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-1160576106862182652006-10-11T10:03:00.000-04:002007-03-15T18:02:54.405-04:00Life: A Journey Through Time<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/LIFE_Project.jpg" align=left>Frans Lanting <br /><A HREF="http://www.lifethroughtime.com/index.html">Viewable online</a><br />All ages<br /><br />"The Life Project is a lyrical interpretation of life on Earth from its earliest beginnings to its present diversity." Start with the slideshow on the website, then explore the timeline. This is all part of a multivenue spectacle that includes a book, orchestral performance (music by Philip Glass), and exhibition (scheduled to tour the world), in which images by Frans Lanting, a photographer for National Geographic, are placed in the service of telling the story of life on our planet. Read along with the slideshow or not...the pictures tell the story either way. Stunning.nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12879827.post-1160401711967536012006-10-09T09:38:00.000-04:002007-03-15T18:03:55.514-04:00A Touch of Greatness<img src="http://www.echonyc.com/~ngraham/uploads/i_touchofgreatness.jpg" align=left>Leslie Sullivan & Catherine Gund, 2004<br />54 minutes + bonus material, color/b+w documentary<br />All ages<br /><br />This portrait of progressive educator Albert Cullum offers inspiration to anyone who has ever been wearied by the education system. As a teacher in a conventional public school in 60s Rye, New York, Cullum introduced drama, spectacle and fun to his classrooms. For geography, the class went outside and hopped on one foot across a United States chalked onto blacktop, and "swam" a Mississippi River made of a long role of paper. Cullum directed student productions of Shakespeare in which his only notes, he claimed, were "I don't believe you." The results were stunning. Blends interviews and archival television broadcasts with film footage of productions of Shakespeare, Antigone and Joan of Arc shot by Robert Downey, Sr. My son said, "If all teachers were like that, I'd want to go to school." (If you're sending your child to a stultifying place for indoctrination, beware...they may not want to go back after watching this.)nancy oarneire grahamhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14268381210476277512noreply@blogger.com0