Festival update: programme going to Press very soon…

We have an amazing array of new or rarely seen films to screen, with real power and importance for our lives and communities – about our environment, our food, our politics, our wildlife – and our future.  Central to many of the films is climate change, the myriad ways in which it impacts the life of our planet and creative inspiring projects aimed at mitigating those impacts.

Highlights include…

The importance of the Oceans:

The UK PREMIERE of Sharkwater: Extinction  by Rob Stewart, the remarkable Canadian film-maker and conservationist who tragically died in a diving accident while making this film last year, aged 37. We wish to honour and celebrate the life of this extraordinarily brave and deeply committed young man by showing both  Revolution and Sharkwater: Extinction on Saturday evening.

Revolution (2012) dramatically explores the environmental threats posed to the oceans & world – and shows how young people can and are helping to solve the problems.

Sharkwater: Extinction (2018) follows the sharks – and the money – into the pirate fishing industry, uncovering corruption and a multi-billion dollar scandal. Without the oceans’ main predator, marine ecosystems are being destroyed beyond repair. Stewart’s mission is to save the sharks and oceans before it’s too late.

 

Food and Agriculture:

In The Worm is Turning we see the devastating effects of chemical agriculture in the Indian Punjab – dead soil, no trees, no birds, no insects, and polluted water and air.

In our Hands explores the idea of food sovereignty and shows a global movement to take back control of the food system.

 

Social Justice:

The remarkable Disturbing the Peace follows the transformational journeys of Israeli and Palestinian fighters, from soldiers committed to armed battle to peace activists.

Power Trip highlights the role of the media and lobby groups in shaping the public perception of fracking, and what can happen when local people fight back.

 

Films by and about Women:

As 2018 marks the centenary of some women getting the vote in the UK, we celebrate the achievements and the continuing struggles of women today. We also seek to redress the imbalance in the film industry. Almost half the films we are showing have the F-Rating, a classification for any film directed or written by a woman.

The outstanding What Tomorrow Brings follows one year in the life of the first all-girls school in a conservative Afghan village.

The Barefoot Artist chronicles the extraordinary life of Lily Yeh, a community-based artist in some of the world’s most troubled areas.

 

TTTFF18 is taking place in three venues:  Dartington Barn Cinema, Totnes Cinema and Totnes Civic Hall.

This is our second collaboration with the Barn Cinema, and we are delighted by their continued involvement.

They will be showing Tawai in which Bruce Parry (of the BBC’s Tribe, Amazon & Arctic) explores how humans relate to nature and how this influences our societies, as well as Albatross, which reveals the effect of plastic on the fate of tens of thousands of albatross chicks.

Totnes Cinema joins us for the first time and is a terrific addition to the Festival, with two showings on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings:  Faces Places, Agnes Varda’s latest film and  Ai Weiwei’s Human Flow.

They will also host a poetry and music event on Thursday evening.  Poet Matt Harvey, in collaboration with artist Claudia Pilsl, will be followed by the jazz group Shadow Factory performing live accompaniment to The Seashell and the Clergyman – the first surrealist film directed by Germaine Dulac in 1928.

Plus a FREE showing on Saturday afternoon of Next Generation, short films by young people.

 

Most film screenings offer time for discussion with either the film-makers or local experts, including Rob Hopkins, Jacqi Hodgson and Guy Watson.

There will also be four free workshops:  two on animation, one each for children and adults, a guided walk discovering birds with Tony Whitehead and a corker on Craftivism – radical activism through crafts.

We are very excited about the range and depth of the programme – make a date for mid-November and join us!

Totnes Cinema and Transition Town Totnes Film Festival 2018

Totnes Cinema and Transition Town Totnes Film Festival 2018: A first for us


We at Totnes Cinema are delighted to be co- hosting a number of thought provoking films and events during the Film Festival week.

Totnes Cinema was set up as a Community Interest Company (CIC) with a mission to return the old cinema venue to its former glory. Run as a social enterprise and supported entirely by the generosity of local people, we want the Totnes Cinema to embrace the character and colour of this unique town; being part of this year’s Transition Town Totnes Film Festival will embrace these ideals.

As a venue, Totnes Cinema provides cinema goers with a special experience – a relaxed and welcoming space, with fully licensed bar, comfy sofas and state of the art cinema seats on our balcony, we encourage our audience to arrive early to meet friends and to linger afterwards to discuss the films.

Come and find us on the High St or at
https://www.totnescinema.co.uk
or Facebook
https://www.facebook.com/theromanyrevisited

About us ….

Calling all budding movie makers…

Join the Transition film festival for a weekend of fun workshops which explores the art of film making. Discover the skills to create an animated film.  Writing your own scripts, tell your own story and direct your own movie. These workshops are funded by South Hams District Councillors: Jacqi Hodson, John Green and Robert Vint. Continue reading “Calling all budding movie makers…” »

Transition Town Totnes 10th anniversary celebrations

Join us for the opening night of the Transition Town Totnes Film Festival, featuring music, words, films, wine, beer, laughter and tears.

Transition Town Totnes are not only celebrating the opening of the third Transition film festival, but also the 10th anniversary of the worlds first Transition Town.

The night will be hosted by poet Matt Harvey and will feature songs from acclaimed a capella choir Glorious Chorus and singer song writer Ros Brady, a deep ecologist  who has written songs from interviews with top environmental thinkers such as Patrick Holden, Mary Colwell, Jonathon Porrit and Vandana Shiva. She tours the country with her partner Simon Barron also as folk duo BarronBrady.

We will also take a glance at TTT’s past, present and future with Rob Hopkins and others, enjoy film shorts from across our 10 years, have a sneak preview of film trailers from the festival programme and of course enjoy local beer and wine from the bar.

Price: Free event, donations gratefully received 

Embrace!

‘EMBRACE’ is a social impact documentary that explores the issue of body image. The project has been supported by nearly 9000 Kickstarter pledgers who responded to a fundraising trailer she released in 2014, which has now had over 25 million internet views.

The inspiration for EMBRACE came about after Taryn Brumfitt posted an unconventional before-and-after image on the internet in 2013 that sparked an international media frenzy. The image, which embraces body diversity, was seen by over 100 million people worldwide and led to hundreds of interviews and articles. But Taryn soon realized how restrictive 4-minute TV interviews, 800 word articles and 140 characters on Twitter can be. This issue needed a louder voice on a bigger platform, so the idea of creating the documentary EMBRACE was born.