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Cinema Politica an überculture project
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Free Political Film Screenings Cinema Politica is a project organized by Montréal-based non-profit überculture, and comprises a network of several local film exhibition series across Canada, Europe and the USA. Donate

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Monday January 21, 2008
Start: 18:15
End: 20:30

Ce documentaire, produit par Palestinian Agricultural Relief Comitees (PARC), traite des problèmes des colonies de peuplement israéliennes ainsi que du mur qu'Israël construit en Cisjordanie et leurs effets dévastateurs pour les perspectives de paix en Palestine.

Les guerres et les occupations israéliennes ne cessent d'aggraver la situation des populations palestiniennes et, récemment aussi, libanaises.

Quelles sont les conséquences pour la lutte du peuple palestinien pour ses droits?

Et pour les mouvements de solidarité de la société civile internationale?

***

Start: 19:30

A candid retelling of the events following the fall of Baghdad in 2003 by high ranking officials such as former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, Ambassador Barbara Bodine (in charge of Baghdad during the Spring of 2003), Lawrence Wilkerson, former Chief of Staff to Colin Powell, and General Jay Garner (in charge of the occupation of Iraq through May 2003) as well as Iraqi civilians, American soldiers, and prominent analysts.

Friday January 25, 2008
Start: 19:00
End: 19:30

A personal examination of Sophie Harkat's three year struggle to save her husband Mohamed. Produced by Hugh Gibson and Anice Wong and directed by Anice Wong this film remains an excellent teaching tool and a great introduction for people who haven't heard about security certificates and want to learn more.

* National Day of Action Against Security Certificate Legislation.

Start: 19:00
End: 23:00

After spending nearly 11 years in prison for breaking into an animal experimentation laboratory to expose animal cruelty, a young man is finally released and risks it all again to save more animals.
Who is he? What kind of a person would risk so much to save the lives of animals?
The Animal Liberation Front, comprised of clandestine animal rights activists, is now labeled the #1 domestic terrorist threat by the FBI.

Start: 19:30
End: 20:30

The story of how the Sandinistas, supported by much of the populace, took power of Nicaragua in July 1979. The Sandinistas inherited a country in ruins with a debt of U.S.$1.6 billion dollars, an estimated 50,000 war dead, 600,000 homeless, and a devastated economic infrastructure. Co-host: Film Director Kevin Matthews.

Start: 20:30
End: 21:00

Jesus Tecu Osorio witnessed the murder of his parents and siblings in 1982 during Guatemala's bloody civil war. Today, he leads a courageous campaign for memorials, exhumations, and the prosecution of former military officers.

Monday January 28, 2008
Start: 19:00
End: 21:30

Arts et résistance font bon ménage depuis des siècles. Les arts écrits, vivants, sur toile ou sur pellicule et aujourd'hui sur trame virtuelle, sont très souvent associés à des luttes sociales.

L'art permet la mise en idée, la construction imaginaire et appelle à la propagation et à la résistance aux diktats établis.

Films projetés:

Dossier Musiques Rebelles
En tournée - Le Paradis à Rimouski (Aysegul Koc)
http://citoyen.onf.ca/node/812&dossier_nid=1269
Durée: 5 minutes 17, 2005

Description
Au cours de la tournée Musique Rebelles Americas, certaines

Start: 19:30
End: 22:00

Made in L.A. follows the remarkable story of three Latina immigrants working in Los Angeles garment sweatshops as they embark on a three-year odyssey to win basic labor protections from trendy clothing retailer Forever 21. In intimate observational style, Made in L.A. reveals the impact of the struggle on each woman’s life as they are gradually transformed by the experience. Compelling, humorous, deeply human, Made in L.A. is a story about immigration, the power of unity, and the courage it takes to find your voice.

Start: 19:30

Aqui will be followed by a screening of Made in LA.

Experimental short exploring the lives of those on the political, social and visual borderline.

Wednesday January 30, 2008
Start: 19:00
End: 21:00

In the late 20th Century the distinction between soldier and mercenary became blurred. The recent use of private military companies (PMCs) in Iraq has been more extensive than at any time in modern history. The brutal killing of four PMC employees in Fallujah in April 2004 made it clear that these “contractors” are not merely workers in a foreign land. But are the lives of such men the only thing at risk when we privatize warfare?

Friday February 1, 2008
Start: 19:30
End: 23:00

In 1923 Vladimir Jabotinsky, leading intellectual of the Zionist movement and father of the right wing of that movement, wrote:

"Zionist colonization must either stop, or else proceed regardless of the native population. Which means that it can proceed and develop only under the protection of a power that is independent of the native population - behind an IRON WALL, which the native population cannot breach."

Monday February 4, 2008
Start: 19:30
End: 22:00

The Water Front follows a screening of Gimme Green and will include a post-screening discussion with director and Concordia professor Liz Miller.

What if you lived by the largest body of fresh water in the world but could no longer afford to use it?

Start: 19:31

Gimme Green precedes a screening of The Water Front, which will be followed by a discussion with director and Concordia professor Liz Miller.

SYNOPSIS:
Lawns are undeniably an American symbol.
But what do they really symbolize?
Pride and prosperity? Or waste and conformity?

Tuesday February 5, 2008
Start: 19:30
End: 21:30

A candid retelling of the events following the fall of Baghdad in 2003 by high ranking officials such as former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage, Ambassador Barbara Bodine (in charge of Baghdad during the Spring of 2003), Lawrence Wilkerson, former Chief of Staff to Colin Powell, and General Jay Garner (in charge of the occupation of Iraq through May 2003) as well as Iraqi civilians, American soldiers, and prominent analysts.

Friday February 8, 2008
Start: 19:00
End: 21:00

It's a story of their dedication to independence and triumph over adversity, and a story of cooperation and hope. Several Cubans expressed the belief that living on an island, with its natural boundaries, breeds awareness that there are limits to natural resources. Everyone who has worked on the documentary hopes that, seeing this film, people will also see the world on which we live, as another, much larger, island.

Saturday February 9, 2008
Start: 14:00
End: 16:00

Every part of the struggle against Apartheid had its own style of songs to describe and interpret events and the emotions they engendered. Be transported into the eye of the hurricane with music from the revolution.

Monday February 11, 2008
Start: 19:30

This screening is co-presented by UMOJA Concordia, who will be speaking at the screening.

Wednesday February 13, 2008
Start: 19:00
End: 21:00

Some time in the 1960s, in the heart of Africa, a new animal was introduced into Lake Victoria as a little scientific experiment. The Nile Perch, a voracious predator, extinguished almost the entire stock of the native fish species. However, this new gigantic fish multiplied incredibly fast, and its white fillets are today exported all around the world. Huge hulking ex-Soviet cargo planes come daily to collect the latest catch in exchange for their southbound cargo: Kalashnikovs and ammunitions for the uncounted wars in the dark center of the African continent.

Start: 19:00
End: 22:00

Everyone has heard both the positives and negatives of genetically modified crops, from biotech companies like Monsanto and from environmental and consumer groups like Greenpeace, yet no one has actually heard from those who actually grow the food we eat - the farmers.

"Around the world, Canada or Ethiopia, it's the same: farmers have been kept out of the loop in terms of the development of new technologies."

-Author and researcher Pat Roy Mooney, quoted in the film

Friday February 15, 2008
Start: 19:00
End: 21:00

Her opponents call her “The Green Killer”. They gave her “The Bullshit Award” for sustaining poverty. TIME says she is a hero of our times, an icon for youngsters all over the world. The film is about Vandana Shiva, Indian environmental activist and nuclear physicist, who was awarded the Right Livelihood Award in 1993. It’s a film on globalisation and patenting, on genetic engineering, bio-piracy, indigenous knowledge.

Start: 19:30
End: 23:00

In the summer of 2006, a broad-based, non-violent, popular uprising exploded in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca.

Some compared it to the Paris Commune, while others called it the first Latin American revolution of the 21st century.

But it was the people’s use of the media that truly made history in Oaxaca.

Saturday February 16, 2008
Start: 14:00
End: 15:00

One of the first, and certainly the most influential, films about apartheid. A documentary shot by a British team who wanted to remain anonymous for fear of reprisals (not just against them, but the people who helped them). Most of the white South Africans they encountered were persuaded that they were simply making home movies. Consequently, and illegally, they went where camera teams had never penetrated: into the heart of the Bantustan (the tiny waste area designated for black development), the various ghettos, even into the vast houses of the white farmers.

Tuesday February 19, 2008
Start: 16:45
End: 18:25

The first film of its kind to chronicle the reasons behind Iraq€'s descent into guerilla war, warlord rule, criminality and anarchy, NO END IN SIGHT is a jaw-dropping, insider's tale of wholesale incompetence, recklessness and venality.

Start: 19:30
End: 21:00

On the Caribbean island of the Dominican Republic, tourists flock to pristine beaches unaware that a few miles away thousands of dispossessed Haitians have toiled under armed-guard on plantations harvesting sugarcane, much of which ends up in U.S. kitchens. They work grueling hours and frequently lack decent housing, clean water, electricity, education or healthcare. "The Price of Sugar" follows Father Christopher Hartley, a charismatic Spanish priest, as he organizes some of this hemisphere's poorest people, challenging powerful interests profiting from their work.

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