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These 4 Marlborough Kids Are Putting A Middle-School Twist On Punk Rock
Last summer they released an album (titled "Generation Z") and were the youngest band ever to play the traveling punk rock festival Warped Tour. A documentary film crew started following them around with plans to release a feature-length film in early 2020. They play suburban porch fests and bars like Jamaica Plain's Midway Café. The band has its first gig at the Brighton Music Hall, as an opening act for Big D & The Kids Table, coming up in late October.
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The future of punk rock rages against the machine (i.e. bedtime and the Tooth Fairy)
After 24 summers, the Vans Warped Tour is hanging up its skate shoes. The traveling showcase for proudly juvenile pop-punk music has finally relented to dreaded maturity. But if you happened to be at one of the last tour stops, at the Xfinity Center in Mansfield late last month, you may have noticed that the future of punk is in very good — if exceedingly small — hands.
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Stirring Baseball Documentaries Showcase Jewish Subjects
Baseball movies based upon real people and real events tend to be more Hollywood than history. That was certainly the case in A League Of Their Own (1992), Eight Men Out (1998), Forty-Two (2013), Moneyball (2011), and even Pride of the Yankees (1942). But a pair of new documentaries, from different producers, are proving more pleasing to purists.
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Checking in With New Plaza Cinema, a Heartfelt Effort to Keep Lincoln Plaza Cinema Alive
Upcoming documentaries include Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel (opening August 5), about Jewish major leaguers who played for Israel’s national baseball team.
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Exclusive: Full Trailer for 'Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel' Doc
"For Team Israel, it's a chance for the underdog to get a crack at the big dog." We are proud to exclusively debut the official trailer for an award-winning documentary titled Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel, made by filmmakers Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, and Jeremy Newberger. This uplifting, moving, intimate sports documentary tells the inspiring story of a team of nice Jewish baseball players who take on the world. Some of them are actual players from the MLB who join the national team to compete. After years of defeat, Team Israel is finally ranked among the world's best in 2017, eligible to compete in the prestigious international tournament - the World Baseball Classic. The film won Best Documentary at a few Jewish Film Festivals this year, and is ready for release this August. My favorite part about their team is the "Mensch on the Bench" mascot, and the final bit from the end of this trailer. Perfect answer. Watch the full trailer below.
Exclusive trailer (+ poster) for documentary Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel, from YouTube:
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Play ball! In Israel! With some hard-hitting American Jews
There is a moving, somewhat entertaining scene in the recently released film “Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel” where Moshe Abutbul, the mayor of Bet Shemesh, invites the 10 visiting American baseball players from Team Israel and their significant others to help him dig a hole in the ground on the site of a future baseball field and stadium. He shares that in the Chassidic tradition, “If you want something to grow, you plant seeds.” Hopeful that the team’s success and baseball’s popularity in Israel will continue to grow, he and the Team Israel players “plant” a fresh white baseball in the ground.
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Baseball, patriotism on deck in ‘Tale of Team Israel’
During last year’s World Baseball Classic, after Israel defeats a team from a country with a more storied baseball history, a reporter from that country sends a line drive at the Team Israel manager at a press conference: “What is your opinion on a team that should represent Israel but actually represents the United States?”
“It’s a face-saver … ‘Well, we didn’t really lose to Israel, we lost to just another USA team,’ ” Israel manager Jerry Weinstein says later. “Well that’s B.S. You lost to Israel, brother.”
In fact, there is some validity to the reporter’s charge. The Israel team is composed of Americans, some of whom were not raised Jewish but had a Jewish parent or grandparent. (The World Baseball Classic requires only that players be eligible for citizenship in the country they represent, and Israel is not unique in recruiting players from other countries.)
That means another description for the squad could be “Team Birthright,” as in the free trip to Israel for Jews under age 26. And in the documentary “Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel,” we get to follow the players with Jewish ties and a healthy sense of humor on an unexpectedly successful trip through Israel, Seoul and Tokyo.
The film, directed by Seth Kramer, Jeremy Newberger and Daniel A. Miller, reminds us that no matter how many times you hear an account of a first trip to Israel or an underdog team done good, there is always an opportunity for a new, compelling version.
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Ike Davis reflects on magical Team Israel run he nearly missed
Ike Davis wasn’t sure what to make of the invitation to join Team Israel for the World Baseball Classic in September 2016.
The former Mets first baseman was battling a litany of injuries and had recently been released after a brief stint with the Yankees.
“I didn’t know if I was up to the challenge,” Davis said. “I didn’t want to commit and back out.”
But there was something else that gave Davis, the son of a Baptist father — ex-Yankee Ron — and a Jewish mother, pause.
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ISRAEL DEAL
Remember Team Israel from the 2017 World Baseball Classic, a group that earned national attention by making it out of the qualifying stages and, as the 41st ranked team in the world, stunned the likes of Korea, Chinese Taipei, and the Netherlands to advance out of the round-robin round of the tournament?
A documentary was made of the team's journey entitled, "Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel." The award-winning doc makes its New York City debut on Tuesday at the JCC Manhattan.
MLB.com reporter Jonathan Mayo hatched the idea for the film about a group of Jewish major leaguers traveling to Israel to discover their roots. Except it became more than that when the team outplayed expectations.
"When we first began the project," Mayo said. "we really thought it was going to be about all these Jewish baseball players exploring what it means to be Jewish by exploring Israel. While that's obviously still a large theme in the movie, their run in the WBC made it much more about baseball and their Cinderella Story than any of us could have ever imagined."
Former Met Ike Davis, who starred on Team Israel, will be among the players on hand at the screening in Manhattan.
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Heading Home: Team Israel’s Magic Carpet Ride
Film examines ‘miracle’of World Baseball Classic.
The new film, “Heading Home,” about Team Israel’s Joe Hardy-like ride through victory after victory in the Major League’s 2017 World Baseball Classic, is a sports documentary, of course, but a love story all the more. As unlikely as their on-field success, even more unlikely was the Jewish and Zionist pride that percolated among the American-born players who, when first recruited, had only the most tenuous ties to anything Jewish, let alone to Israel, the country they were representing.
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Jewish Film Festival’s CineMondays presents ‘Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel’
"It's about something bigger"
Americans usually consider baseball to be a quintessentially American pastime. But the documentary Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel (directed by Seth Kramer, Jeremy Newberger, and Daniel A. Miller, and written by Miller), looks at national pride among other “boys of summer.”
The baseball caps come off, but the kippot stay on the heads of Team Israel. (Photo via IMDB.com.)
Heading Home focuses on Team Israel, the formation of its 2017 roster, its experiences in Israel, and its rapid rise to international stardom, culminating in the World Baseball Classic. This underdog team wasn’t expected to succeed but exceeded all expectations.
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JFilm Festival opening night is leadoff hit
JFilm opened with screenings of "Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel," which illustrates the rise of the Israel national baseball team in the 2017 World Baseball Classic.
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Underdogs Come Up Big – A Review of Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel
It’s a classic underdog story. The team of plucky misfits come up big and wins the whole thing. Well, not quite in this case but Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel is about more than baseball. It’s geopolitics on the scale of a baseball tournament.
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Three up, three down: Angels' 2009 draftees have big week; Mets' Dark Knight has dark days
"Heading home:" Team Israel's Cinderella run in last year's World Baseball Classic gets the documentary treatment in a film packed with light moments and triumphant action. But the most compelling scenes come before the tournament starts, when the team of Jewish Americans — most of whom grew up playing ball rather than praying on Saturdays — travels to Israel to learn about the country they are about to represent. In a particularly gripping exchange, two players engage in friendly baseball banter with a Palestinian merchant in Jerusalem, but the laughter stops when they ask whether he could support their team. The Los Angeles Jewish Film Festival screens the documentary Sunday at 2:30 p.m. at the Laemmle Town Center, 17200 Ventura Blvd., Encino.
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JFilm Festival marks 25 years of celebrating Jewish culture and community
The JFilm Festival of 2018 has grown by leaps and bounds since it took root as the Pittsburgh Jewish-Israeli Film Festival 25 years ago.
Kathryn Spitz Cohan took over the reins of Film Pittsburgh, with JFilm as the centerpiece, in October 2001 — just after 9/11, she notes. What started as a part-time job has expanded to all-consuming and includes year-round and seasonal staff. The Teen Film program this year brought 8,000 students to share in-theater experiences.
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'Home' boys: How the WBC inspired a movie that tells a moving story about baseball and life
There’s a pervasive optimism baked into “Heading Home,” a film about Israel’s run deep into the 2017 World Baseball Classic, that subverts an entire genre. This is the anti-Woody Allen movie, about Jews who are not self-loathing but celebratory, not full of angst but teeming with mirth, not lamenting what is but seeking what can be. These aren’t guys making the leaflet of Famous Jewish Sports Legends anytime soon. They’re just looking for something beyond what baseball gave to them.
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Detroit Jewish Film Festival features film on American-Jewish Major League Baseball
We're gearing up for the annual Detroit Jewish Film Festival.
This year one of the films being screened at the event takes a look at American-Jewish Major League Baseball players who play for Israel in the World Baseball Classic.
They then get to visit the Promised land for the very first time.
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Documentary on Israeli National Team's World Baseball Classic Run Heads to Israel
The movie was the brainchild of MLB.com reporter Jonathan Mayo, wanting to combine his love for baseball and his Jewish background into a movie about Jewish major leaguers traveling to discover their roots.
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The JCC’s Lenore Marwil Jewish Film Festival celebrates its 20th birthday with a diverse collection of films.
A Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright. A longtime baseball fan-turned-film director. An activist/actor.
These are three of the speakers appearing to spark discussions of films that showcase their talents at the 20th-annual Lenore Marwil Detroit Jewish Film Festival.
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Baseball Birthright
I am not typically late for things. Except, one morning in March of last year, I was running late to a doctor’s appointment for my wife and me. She was already there, having let me sleep in since I had been up late the night before. Not for work or anything. But to watch Team Israel in the World Baseball Classic.
Why would a Catholic kid from Cleveland care about Jewish baseball so much (and more important, why would his wife tolerate the “so much” part)? Answer: Because it was baseball, in the “can you believe this is happening?” sense of it. As an American, I obviously was pulling for Team USA going into the WBC. (Spoiler: We won.) But the qualification of Team Israel into the field of 16 teams was a bit of a surprise. The success it ended up having in the competition—winners of its first four games as huge underdogs, only bowing out the day I arrived tardy at the doctor’s office only to discover my wife would be having twins—was completely shocking.
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Team Israel's inspiring World Baseball Classic run documented
The documentary "Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel" tells a moving underdog story that should inspire people who attend an upcoming Miami Jewish Film Festival members screening.
The screening takes place at 7 p.m. on April 3 at Temple Beth Sholom , 4144 Chase Ave. in Miami Beach. The screening is free for MJFF Members, and non-members will be able to buy tickets at the synagogue the day of the screening.
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There were miracles aplenty for Team Israel in ‘Heading Home’ documentary
Most of the stories Jewish kids learn in Sunday school involve some kind of miracle, so it’s fitting that “Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel,” would never have been made without a few of their own.
The Ironbound Films documentary, which chronicles the journey of Team Israel in the 2017 World Baseball Classic, will be screened three times during the Chicago Jewish Film Festival, which runs through March 18.
The idea for the film came in 2015 — filmmakers Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger began interviewing Jewish baseball players about their experiences and the stereotypes that come along with that, but they found there wasn’t much of a narrative.
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Israel’s impact in baseball world portrayed in new documentary
Since he was a child, Jonathan Mayo has had an obsession with learning about Jews in baseball.
He idolized the Jewish superstars of the game such as Hank Greenberg and Sandy Koufax. Mayo was determined to uncover the stories of the Jewish players who are not just a minority in the world, but in baseball as well.
Today, Mayo is one of the lead writers for MLBPipeline.com and his obsession remains persistent.
His desire to study the small population of Jewish players led him to begin a journey with three friends from Jewish sleep-away camp. Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, and Jeremy Newberger, of Ironbound Films, embarked on this journey with Mayo to create Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel.
“Jeremy and I have been talking for the last eight or nine years trying to think of a project to do together that really made sense,” Mayo told Sports360AZ.com. “And then I had this idea of, ‘what if we brought a group of Jewish baseball players to Israel?’ That’s what the idea was, initially. Kind of like a baseball birthright.”
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Sundance Wish List: 69 Films We Hope Will Head to Park City in 2018
Another exciting Sundance lineup is right around the corner, and as filmmakers wait for the final word, we've assembled this list of strong possibilities for the 2018 program.
“Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel”
Director: Seth Kramer, Jeremy Newberger, and Daniel A. Miller
Why We Hope It Heads to Park City: When you think of countries with rich traditions of baseball, Israel probably isn’t the first one that comes to mind. Be that as it may, Jews have been integral to the history of the sport, and a quirk in the rules of the World Baseball Classic allows Jewish-Americans to play for the Israeli team. Despite their 200-1 odds, and being dubbed the “Jamaican bobsled team of the WBC,” Team Israel did shockingly well at the 2017 WBC. How well? That might be a spoiler, but this doc from the team behind “Évocateur: The Morton Downey Jr. Movie” unpacks the story, and follows the players on an eventful trip to the motherland as many of them get in touch with their heritage for the very first time. —DE
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Documentary focuses on Upper St. Clair graduate’s bond with brother
A scene from a reel of half-century-old Super 8 says more than words ever could about what the Talman family of Upper St. Clair often faced.
Woods Garth Talman Sr. is pushing young Woods Jr. – everyone calls him Woody – in his wheelchair through Kennywood Park. The camera catches a passing young lady who stops abruptly, turns and gazes at the boy for a few lingering seconds.
That kind of display never sat too well with Ann Talman.
“When I was a little girl, oh, it made me so mad,” she recalled. “I was like a pit bull. I would just stare down anyone who would stare at my brother. I would have that face of: ‘What are you looking at?’”
After all, Ann always has been Woody’s Order, the nickname she received after he “ordered” a little sister, according to family legend, right around nine months before her arrival. And she is the only sibling of a now-69-year-old man who was born with cerebral palsy, a situation that didn’t deter his parents from helping him lead as normal a childhood as possible.
“They were pioneers in inclusion and mainstreaming before it even existed, because Woody was front and center, and absolutely included in everything,” the Upper St. Clair High School graduate said. “There were a lot of people at that time who just never would have taken a handicapped child out into the world. He was a Cub Scout. We went to church. We went to restaurants, and he had good manners.
A career actress whose credits vary from starring alongside Elizabeth Taylor on Broadway to guest appearances on “Seinfeld” and “Murphy Brown,” Ann has included her brother in her professional career. She wrote and performs a one-woman play, which made its Pittsburgh debut in February, named after herself, so to speak: “Woody’s Order!” explores the special bond the pair have shared through thick and thin since, well, Woody put in his order.
The play, in turn, inspired a 16-minute documentary film of the same name that makes its local debut at 4:30 p.m. Sept. 10 at Southside Works Cinema as part of Pittsburgh’s fifth annual ReelAbilities Film Festival. The event, which runs through Sept. 13, focuses on films that promote awareness and appreciation of the lives, stories and artistic expressions of individuals with disabilities.
“When I would do readings of it or workshops of it,” Ann said about the stage version, “I never wanted Woody to see me doing it around other people. Because it’s so emotional, I just felt like it was too much for him. And so I thought to myself, maybe it would be really cool if I read it to him sometime, and I’ll have somebody videotape me reading it to him, because his reactions will be so beautiful.”
The idea eventually led her to the filmmaking team of Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger, who captured the Talmans together on July 1, 2015, before spending the next year on editing toward the final product.
“Then they started submitting it to film festivals, and next thing you know, it’s getting in all these festivals, and now it’s eligible for an Oscar,” Ann said. “And they’ve told me that out of all the documentaries they’ve ever made, they’re most proud of this one.”
In the film, which premiered in April at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City, her readings are interspersed with still photos and an impressive assortment of video footage, such as the Kennywood scene, that help illustrate the narrative substantially.
“When I pitched the idea of the documentary to the guys who made it with me, they said, ‘Oh, by the way, do you have any old home movies?’” she recalled. “And I said, ‘Oh, my gosh, do I!’ My mother took home movies from the day she got her camera until the day she died. So I had them from, I’d say, 1950 through 1977. What you see in the documentary is the tip of the iceberg.”
Except for a precious few times, Martha Richardson Talman was behind the camera.
“But she became a presence through those home movies, because as I watched them, I realized how she was looking at me and how she was trying to capture my love of Woody and our incredible bond by what she did,” Ann explained.
Martha, she acknowledged, was prone to depression.
“She was the mother of a handicapped child at a time when there weren’t support groups,” she said. “There wasn’t the internet. There weren’t even psychiatrists who could help you with that, because it was a like a stigma. And she also, I think, would have felt guilty that she needed help because it was so much about him. She was alone, and it really broke her.”
As she relates in her play and the documentary, Ann also has encountered stressful situations, especially during the point of her life in which she was caring for both Woody and her aging father while simultaneously pursuing her acting career.
“I just hope that people will take from it,” she said about the film, “that whatever challenges you’re facing in your life, particularly love and commitment can really give you strength. And family.”
For more information on the ReelAbilities Film Festival, visit pittsburgh.reelabilities.org/2017-films-and-events.
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Film 'Detected' looks at development of high-tech bra that detects breast cancer
LOS ANGELES (KABC) --
The new film "Detected" looks at the development of a high-tech undergarment that could save women's lives.
The movie follows the creation and development of the iTBra, a bra that contains an internet-connected patch which can help detect breast cancer.
Narrated by Melanie Griffith, the film examines how Rob Royea, CEO of Cyrcadia Asia Ltd. was able to oversee bringing this technology from the hospital to the home.
"When I was brought aboard, there was a great technology that was devised by really smart physicists and physicians that allowed detection as a wearable device, but in the hospital," Royea said in an interview with Eyewitness News. "My job was to scale it to be able to come out to the population health and find a way that we could create a technology that could get to the individual."
To see the entire interview with Seth Kramer, co-founder of Ironbound Films and Rob Royea, CEO of Cyrcadia Asia, Ltd., watch the video above.
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Developer Of Bra That Can Detect Breast Cancer Early Discusses Documentary 'Detected'
Rob Royea appeared on KCAL9 News on Sunday morning alongside filmmaker Seth Kramer to discuss the documentary, "Detected," which follows his efforts to develop a bra that can detect breast cancer early. Amy Johnson reports.
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Detected documentary: Discover how an IoT bra can detect early signs of breast cancer
A documentary focusing on the iTBra, an IoT-connected bra that can help detect breast cancer, will debut in Los Angeles this week. Cisco is one of the major sponsors of the film.
The impact of IoT devices continues to grow, as evidenced by a new device, the iTBra. This connected bra, which could go to market globally in the first half of 2018, is intended for the early detection of breast cancer.
The product is so groundbreaking that tech giant Cisco is a sponsor of Detected, a 16-minute documentary about the struggles of the developer of the bra, Rob Royea, and how his wife's family breast cancer history spurred him to push for the product's creation. The movie will debut in Beverly HIlls on June 5.
This year alone, 40,610 women will die from breast cancer in the US. It is the second leading cause of cancer death in women, and the chance that a woman will die from breast cancer is about 1 in 37, according to the American Cancer Society.
While mammograms are the main way that breast cancer is detected, it is more difficult to identify cancer cells in dense breast tissue because it has more tissue and less fat. And 40-50% of women in the US ages 40-74 have dense breasts, according to the Susan G. Komen organization.
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Culinary Institute of America Presents 'Anthropologist' Documentary
The Anthropologist looks at how climate change affects people in locations as varied as Siberia, the South Pacific, and Chesapeake Bay.
By Damita Thomas (Patch Staff) - May 26, 2017 1:06 pm ET
From The Culinary Institute of America: As part of their college experience, students at The Culinary Institute of America are challenged to consider global issues that will affect their future. These issues will be front-and-center when the CIA's Dooley Lecture Series brings the thought-provoking documentary The Anthropologist to campus on Thursday, June 1. The film won Le Prix Grand Écran at the Pariscience Science Film Festival in 2016.Producer and director Seth Kramer will lead a discussion following the 6:30 p.m. screening in the Marriott Pavilion on the college's Hyde Park campus. Admission is free and the public is invited to attend.The Anthropologist looks at how climate change affects people in locations as varied as Siberia, the South Pacific, and Chesapeake Bay. According to production company Ironbound Films:
The Anthropologist examines climate change like no other film before. The fate of the planet is considered from the perspective of American teenager Katie Crate. Over the course of five years, she travels alongside her mother Susie, an anthropologist studying the impact of climate change on indigenous communities. Their journey parallels that of renowned anthropologist Margaret Mead, who for decades sought to understand how global change affects remote cultures.
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Detected: How IoT, Cloud, Wearables, and AI show hope in the fight against breast cancer
A documentary chronicling a man on a mission to develop a product at the intersection of these technologies for early breast cancer detection.
MAY 24, 2017
This is a guest post by Irma Rastegayeva, an innovation catalyst, entrepreneur, and consultant based in Boston. She left a successful 5-year tenure at Google in 2016 to pursue her passion for medical technology and healthcare innovation.
Every 19 seconds, someone in the world is diagnosed with breast cancer"This changes everything!" said women's health nurse practitioner Barbara Dehn. And we desperately need a game-changer. 1 in 8 women in the US will develop invasive breast cancer. Every 13 minutes, one woman dies of breast cancer in the US. Every 19 seconds, someone in the world is diagnosed with breast cancer. The good news is that breast cancer survival is strongly influenced by early and accurate detection: 99% survival with early diagnosis vs only 27% with late diagnosis. We can move the needle on breast cancer by improving early diagnostic capabilities. Here is a story about a man on a mission to combine the power of Internet of Things, temperature sensing wearable technology, and Artificial Intelligence to disrupt the early breast cancer detection.
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Mason anthropologist, daughter featured in documentary
Traveling to film festivals and taking part in Q&As isn’t a regular part of George Mason University anthropologist Susie Crate’s job, but she’s happy to do it. As the subject of the documentary, “The Anthropologist,” she hopes that sharing her work this way might contribute to the conversation about climate change and to a cultural shift as well.
“My whole intention in this is to bring people into this experience,” said Crate, who teaches in the Department of Environmental Science and Policy. “If people can’t travel to these places, we can bring places and the human experience to them.”
“The Anthropologist” will be shown from 4-6 p.m. Monday, April 17, in the Johnson Center as part of the 2017 Earth Week festivities. There will be a Q&A with Crate following the screening.
Documentary film directors Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger, of Ironbound Films, found Crate through the Arctic Social Sciences division of the National Science Foundation.
Crate was already familiar with the filmmakers’ work. She’s used their 2008 documentary, “The Linguists,” about two linguists who document disappearing languages, in her classes for several years.
The filmmakers wanted to travel with Crate, who specializes in environmental and cognitive anthropology. Since 1991, Crate has conducted research in northeastern Siberia, Russia, working with the Viliui Sakha, a Turkic-speaking horse and cattle breeding group. Since 2006 her work has focused on how climate change is affecting their livelihood and culture.
In the summer of 2010, the filmmakers travelled to Siberia with Crate and her teenage daughter, Katie Yegorov-Crate.
“That summer they realized that my daughter’s father is Viliui Sakha and that that entire side of her family is increasingly challenged by the local effects of climate change—and they said, ‘Wouldn’t it be great to have her in [the film] to get the attention of young people?’” Crate said.
After much discussion and a formal agreement to protect Katie’s rights as a minor, she became part of the documentary.
At its core “The Anthropologist” is about four women, three of them anthropologists. As viewers watch Crate and her daughter travel to Siberia, Kiribati in the South Pacific, the Peruvian Andes and the Virginia coast of the Chesapeake Bay to meet with people confronting the local effects of climate change, anthropologist (and George Mason professor emerita) Mary Catherine Bateson talks about the career of her mother, Margaret Mead, who popularized cultural anthropology in America, and discusses what an anthropologist does. Bateson was Robinson Professor of Anthropology and English at Mason until she retired in 2004.
“The Anthropologist” was named to Indiewire’s list of 10 Must-See Documentaries at DOC NYC, America’s largest documentary festival. In addition to film festivals, the documentary has been screened at universities around the country.
Crate said audiences have been genuinely moved by the film.
“I agreed to do the film because I want to make a difference. If I were going to be a ‘film star,’ this is the best reason: getting something out there that is extremely critical for the human race. We are causing climate change and we are the only ones who can turn it around.”
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17 Short Filmmakers to Watch: Tribeca Film Festival Narrative & Documentary
15., 16. & 17. Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, Jeremy Newberger
It’s not often you find 3 directors with a consistent history of working together on individual projects but that is the case for Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger who have worked on multiple documentary projects as a team. The trio returns to Tribeca with their latest short documentary Woody’s Order, which follows actress Ann Talman as she finally performs the solo show she wrote for her muse: her brother with cerebral palsy. The directors have scored numerous accolades in the nearly 10 years of working together including multiple News & Documentary Emmy nominations for previous works like The New Recruits (2010) and The Linguists (2008).
Follow Seth on Twitter.
Follow Jeremy on Twitter.
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Brewers players depart for World Baseball Classic
Meanwhile, on the other side of the globe, two other Brewers Minor Leaguers were already nearing action. Catcher Cody Decker and Team Israel were set to open the tournament against Korea in Seoul at 3:30 a.m. CT on Monday. Israel plays pitcher Wei-Chung Wang's Chinese Taipei team at 9 p.m. CT on Monday.
For Decker, it is a particularly personal experience. He visited Israel with his fiancée, Jenn Sterger, and a group of other players as part of a promotional tour in January. A crew from Ironbound Films followed the 10 players on their trip, which will be chronicled in a documentary called "Heading Home."
"It's one thing to know what you're playing for, but then to actually see it firsthand, be a part of it firsthand, seeing how everyone got behind us, you get a sense that this is bigger than any of our careers," Decker said. "Baseball is just a kid's game, but it has such a power to connect. This is going to end up being something pretty big."
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Tyneside Cinema puts Climate Change, Migration and the Refugee Crisis on the Agenda
THIS year Tyneside Cinema celebrates turning 80 years old in 2017; a landmark achievement for any cultural venue. Originally built to bring local, national and international news to the people of Newcastle, the cinema is now reflecting on its status as a cultural ‘elder’, using its position as a place where people can explore other cultures through film, to engage audiences with the most pressing societal issues that we see ourselves confronted with.
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AMERICAN JEWISH PLAYERS SET TO UNITE FOR ISRAEL IN THE WORLD BASEBALL CLASSIC
Next month in South Korea, 16 countries will play in the quadrennial baseball tournament known as the World Baseball Classic (WBC), a “World Cup” for baseball. One of them is Israel.
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Cementing Israel’s ties to America’s pastime
I never thought the two sides of my life would ever come together. Baseball and Israel. I mean, for most of my life that would have been like peanut butter and tomato sauce.
Jews and baseball: That’s long been a thing. That “Great Jews in Sports” “pamphlet” they joke about in the movie “Airplane?” I had that book. There was that movie on the subject by sports writing great Ira Berkow. Throughout my career covering baseball — two decades worth at this point — I’ve long sought out Jewish players and talked to them about their background. I vividly remember standing behind the batting cage at Shea Stadium talking to Shawn Green about how he grew up calling his grandparents Bubbe and Zayde without totally understanding why.
But baseball and Israel? My favorite sport that I’ve been lucky enough to turn into a career, and the Jewish homeland, where I studied for a year before college? The national pastime with the nation my sister calls home (on Kibbutz Lotan)? No way, no how.
To be fair, there has been some baseball in Israel over the years, mostly brought over by Americans who moved there. There was an ill-fated attempt at a professional Israel Baseball League that lasted just one season in 2007, but the country wasn’t ready.
But now, maybe it is, which is unbelievable to say. I recently returned from a life-changing trip to Israel with professional baseball players. There were 10 in total — nine active and one retired — on the trip, along with significant others, children and friends. About two weeks’ worth was crammed into six days of touring. Historical sites, meeting dignitaries, floating in the Dead Sea, a lot of good food and even a little baseball-related activity. The players soaked up every bit of it.
They weren’t just ambassadors of the game, which was the most important objective, in many ways. They were ambassadors of American Jewry. Many of these players suited up for Team Israel in the World Baseball Classic qualifier, held in Brooklyn, N.Y., last fall. They all had spoken about how proud they were to play because they were Jewish. After this trip, though, the connection, the bond to Israel is exponentially stronger. All of them said they wanted to come back. (Seven of the 10 had never been before.)
They also spoke of the impact they could have on the growth in Israel of the sport they have loved so long. They made two baseball stops on this whirlwind tour. One was at the Baptist Village, where the only real baseball field stands. The players took some batting practice, and then they took questions from the crowd, mostly kids eager to hear every word.
Then there was a groundbreaking in Beit Shemesh for what will be the first full-fledged baseball facility in the country. There were a few hundred people, largely from the younger set, on hand to get autographs and pictures with these Jewish ballplayers. Many of them were American, or their parents were American, and having baseball was depicted as a way to help them ease into life in a new country and culture.
I was lucky enough to witness all of this firsthand. And I have Jewish sleepaway camp to thank. I went on the trip — organized by the Israel Baseball Association and Jeff Aeder, who is starting the Jewish Baseball Museum — to help making a documentary film about the trip and Team Israel, and maybe a little bit about these players exploring their Judaism and building a bond with the Jewish homeland. It’s called “Heading Home” and the professional filmmakers are from Ironbound Films. Ironbound’s CEO is Jeremy Newberger, with whom I went to Camp Young Judaea Sprout Lake some 30 or so years ago. We’re embarking on a fundraising campaign to raise money so we can follow the team’s exploits in the World Baseball Classic in South Korea in March (coming to a Kickstarter near you).
Baseball in Israel is still very much in its infancy. There won’t be a coda to the film with an Israeli in the Major Leagues. Playing in international competition this March might help push it closer to toddlerhood, but there is still a long way to go. The touring players understood this wasn’t going to happen overnight, that it could take 15 to 20 years to take hold. Whether the end game was to produce professional-level players from the country was beside the point. Just growing the game, helping people — their people — learn to play it and love it, that would be the biggest dayenu for all of them.
Jonathan Mayo is a reporter for MLB.com. He lives in Squirrel Hill with his wife, Sara, and their two children.
Read more: The Jewish Chronicle - Cementing Israel s ties to America s pastime
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2017 Cinema Explorations series beings Jan. 14
WATERVILLE — The Maine Film Center will kickoff the 2017 Cinema Explorations film series at 10 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 14, and Sunday, Jan. 15, with screenings of “The Anthropologist” at Railroad Square Cinema, 17 Railroad St. A Q&A with the film’s director, Seth Kramer, will immediately follow the screening.
At the core of the film are the parallel stories of two women: Margaret Mead, who popularized cultural anthropology in America; and Susie Crate, an environmental anthropologist currently studying the impact of climate change. Uniquely revealed from their daughters’ perspectives, Mead and Crate demonstrate a fascination with how societies are forced to negotiate the disruption of their traditional ways of life, whether through encounters with the outside world or the unprecedented change wrought by melting permafrost, receding glaciers and rising tides.
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Holy Landing: WBC team on tour of Israel
Iconic landmarks, falafel and, of course, baseball all on agenda
JERUSALEM -- The sun has set in Jerusalem, issuing in the Sabbath, or Shabbat. It seemed a perfect time to pause and reflect on the action-packed 48 hours the American Jewish baseball players have had since arriving in Israel on Wednesday.
Here to help grow the game of baseball, represent Team Israel -- as they will in South Korea in March in the World Baseball Classic -- as well as explore their own connections to being Jewish and this country, the 10 players on this trip have had two days of a whirlwind tour thus far. Here are the highlights, many of which will be included in a documentary about the trip and Team Israel called "Heading Home," by Ironbound Films.
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Major League Baseball Stars to Visit Israel in January
A group of 11 Major League Baseball players and former Major League stars will be visiting Israel from January 3-10. The players are members of the Team Israel baseball team that will play in the World Baseball Classic (WBC) tournament in March 2017 in Seoul, South Korea. The team won its place in the tournament by qualifying at a tournament in Brooklyn, New York in September.
The players who will be visiting Israel are: Danny Valencia, Sam Fuld, Ty Kelly, Ike Davis, Ryan Lavarnway, Josh Zeid, Cody Decker, Jon Moscot, Corey Baker, Jeremy Bleich and Gabe Kapler.
According to the rules of the WBC, players who are eligible for citizenship of a country are allowed to play on that country’s team. As a result, Jewish baseball players are eligible to play on Team Israel. This will be the first time that American Jewish baseball players represent Team Israel in a world championship.
The team will visit tour Israel, including visiting the holy sites in Jerusalem, an air force base, Masada and the Dead Sea. They will also spend time meeting the local Israeli baseball players of the Israel Association of Baseball, and will have practices for the tournament. An event will be held on January 5 at the Baptist Village at 16:00 where members of the IAB can come to meet the players and watch them practice. Details to follow.
The group will be accompanied by a film crew that will make a documentary of the trip called “Heading Home”.
“This is an extremely exciting event for Israel baseball in particular and for sport in Israel in general,” says Peter Kurz, President of the Israel Association of Baseball. “The team is clearly the most impressive Jewish sports team ever assembled, and we are very proud that they will be representing Israel at the WBC. This trip will be an excellent opportunity for them to learn about Israel and meet the teams and players in Israel that will be supporting them at the WBC.”
The trip is sponsored by JNF Project Baseball, Jeff Aeder, founder of the Jewish Baseball Museum and other donors.
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IndieWire: ‘The Anthropologist’: The Times Are A-Changin’ in Exclusive Look at Award-Winning Documentary — Watch
Ever wanted to follow in the footsteps of beloved anthropologist Margaret Mead? Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger’s award-winning documentary “The Anthropologist” does just that. The film follows American teen Katie Crate who, along with her anthropologist mother Susie, spends five years studying the impact of climate change on indigenous communities. Along the way, their incredible journey parallels Mead’s, who spent decades of her professional career seeking to understand how global change affects remote cultures.
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AAA 2016 Film Screening: The Anthropologist
AAA 2016 Film Screening: The Anthropologist
The Anthropologist considers the fate of the planet from the perspective of an American teenager. Over five years, she travels alongside her mother, Susie Crate, an anthropologist studying the impact of climate change on indigenous communities. Their journey parallels that of renowned anthropologist Margaret Mead, who for decades sought to understand how global change affects remote cultures.
A screening of the film will be held in Auditorium 2 of the Minneapolis Convention Center at 2:45 p.m. on Wednesday, November 16 as part of the SVA Film and Media Festival at the AAA Annual Meeting.
Seth Kramer, one of the film's directors, and Susie Crate will attend the screening and will be available for questions following the film.
The Anthropologist world premiered at DOC NYC in 2015 as a co-presentation with the American Museum of Natural History. The film has since been selected by more than 30 film festivals, including Cleveland, Dallas, IFFBoston, St. Louis, Greenwich International Film Festival and San Francisco Green. It was invited by the United Nations to show at the COP21 Paris Climate Conference; and screened simultaneously at more than 30 universities to celebrate World Anthropology Day. The Anthropologist was selected as opening night film of the Santa Cruz Film Festival where it won the EarthVision Environmental Feature Award, and the Arizona International Film Festival, where it won Best Documentary.
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Human innovation for climate change - Ciné-ONU Vienna screening and Austria premiere of "The Anthropologist"
"I don't think we can change the world. I think that we change, and that changes the world," counsels Susie Crate. She is one of the protagonists of the documentary "The Anthropologist", which shows the impact of climate change on indigenous communities globally. Straight after its premiere at the DOC NYC Film Festival on 13 November 2015, it was shown at the 2015 Paris Climate Conference COP21 and now, on 26 September 2016, at Ciné-ONU Vienna.
The film follows the parallel stories of two popular Anthropologists; Margaret Mead who popularized cultural anthropology in America; and Susie Crate, an environmental anthropologist and is told from the unique perspective of their daughters. Mead and Crate demonstrate a fascination with how societies are forced to negotiate the disruption of their traditional ways of life, whether through encounters with the outside world or the unprecedented change wrought by melting permafrost, receding glaciers and rising tides. Crate's daughter, Katie, as well as Margaret Mead's daughter, Mary now 76, offer a fresh look not only at anthropology, but also the challenges of climate change. Filmed over the course of seven years, the Anthropologist is a meditation on change, both individual and societal.
The screening was followed by a discussion with the Co-director of the film, Seth Kramer, Professor Peter Schweitzer from the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology of the University of Vienna and Johanna Kuchling, Campaigner and Project Coordinator from the Society for Threatened Peoples. The Director of the United Nations Information Service (UNIS) Vienna, Martin Nesirky, moderated the discussion.
Seth Kramer, spoke about making the film and the unique challenge working with a teenager. On one occasion he had to find his way to a Siberian village in the middle of nowhere, one of the field sites where Susie had done research. When he finally arrived, Katie, her daughter, decided she had a bad hair day and didn't want to be on camera. Creating a documentary on a serious topic like climate change can be a risk he said because you will never know how it will be perceived by the audience, but he added: "Even though climate change is a serious topic the movie is sometimes funny and not made in a vacuum." The story is not just a tragic story without hope. The film shows "human beings have the ability to change" which was interesting for him to learn during the shooting of it.
Professor Schweitzer talked about the challenges of being an anthropologist. "You have to be willing to be the child that learns. There is no place where it is easy, so you have to be ready to humiliate yourself". He spoke about his field experiences and how we can cope with the impact of climate change: "If anything is going to save us, it is local innovations".
Johanna Kuchling from the Society for Threatened Peoples raised awareness about the situation of indigenous peoples and that we have to be careful when approaching their communities: "Indigenous peoples already have sustainable ways to use their lands. We have to embrace that knowledge, we can learn a lot from them."
The Vienna screening was the film premiere of "The Anthropologist" in Austria, organized by the United Nations Information Service (UNIS) Vienna in cooperation with the Permanent Mission of the United States of America to the United Nations (Vienna), This Human World (THW) Film Festival and Topkino.
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Oscars’ Crowded Documentary Race Nears a Record: See the Complete List of Films So Far
In September, members of the Academy’s Documentary Branch got an overwhelming homework assignment: DVD screeners of 90 different non-fiction films.
That works out to four and a half hours a day of movie viewing, seven days a week, all month long.
Mind you, nobody in the branch is actually expected to watch all of those films before voting in the Oscars’ Best Documentary Feature category. Instead, each person was randomly assigned 15-20 of those films as required viewing so that every film will be viewed by a chunk of the branch, which consists of more than 250 members.
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Reality Check vom 26.9
In today's programme: Professor Florian Bieber gives his analysis of yesterday's controversial referendum in the Republic of Srpska, Colman OCriodain, the WWF Internationals Policy Expert on Wildlife Trade, explains what needs to be done to protect elephants from poaching, our Washington DC correspondent David Smith outlines the preparation strategies of the Trump and Clinton campaigns ahead of tonight's much anticipated televised debate, and director Seth Kramer talks about his documentary "The Anthropologist", which is showing at the Top Kino in Vienna tonight.
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Inspiring Films That Will Blow Your Heart and Mind
The Anthropologist follows the stories of daughters of the anthropologists, Margaret Mead and Susie Crate, around the world as they document the very real effects of climate change. The realisation this touching and personal film brings is how problems being experienced in remote parts of the world will soon land on our own doorsteps. As anthropologists, they study how the people living in the most effected regions learn to cope with their lands literally falling apart under their feet.
Amidst the haunting images of cattle sinking into permafrost in Siberia or villagers standing chest-deep in the sea where their town hall used to be, the film explores the resilience of human beings in the face of extreme change and what positive impacts we can result from a disaster situation.
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Film Acquisition Rundown, Week of May 30: Gravitas Grabs ‘The Anthropologist,’ MUBI Goes Cannes-Crazy
Keep up with the wild and wooly world of indie film acquisitions with our weekly Rundown of everything that’s been picked up around the globe.
– Gravitas Ventures announced have acquired North American rights to “The Anthropologist,” the hit documentary by Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, and Jeremy Newberger of Ironbound Films. The features explores climate change like no other film before, using the perspective of American teenager Katie Crate as she travels alongside her mother Susie, an anthropologist studying the impact of climate change on indigenous communities. Their journey parallels that of renowned anthropologist Margaret Mead, who for decades sought to understand how global change affects remote cultures. The film will be released by Gravitas Ventures across all platforms in the US and Canada this fall. “Gravitas Ventures champions eclectic films with heart. They are the perfect partners to help introduce ‘The Anthropologist’ to cultures everywhere,” said Daniel A. Miller, producer, director, and writer for Ironbound Films.
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“The Anthropologist,” “Theo Who Lived” land distribution
Distributor Gravitas Ventures has acquired North American rights to environmental documentary The Anthropologist (pictured).
Directed by Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, and Jeremy Newberger of Ironbound Films, the doc follows an anthropologist and her teenage daughter as they study the impact of climate change on indigenous communities around the world. Read realscreen’s story on the doc here.
The El Segundo, California-based company will release the film across all platforms in the U.S. and Canada this fall. The Anthropologist world premiered at DOC NYC in November as a co-presentation with the American Museum of Natural History.
In other doc distribution news, Zeitgeist Films has acquired the U.S. theatrical and non-theatrical rights to David Schisgall’s Theo Who Lived, about American journalist Theo Padnos who was kidnapped in Syria by Islamic militants and held for 22 months.
The distributor will open the doc theatrically on September 30 at Lincoln Plaza Cinemas in New York City and roll it out in select U.S. cities later in the fall.
Read more: http://realscreen.com/2016/06/02/the-anthropologist-theo-who-lived-land-distribution/#ixzz4ARClv35A
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Thora Birch Joins ‘Public Affairs’, Gravitas Acquires ‘The Anthropologist’, Zeitgeist Lands ‘Theo Who Lived’
Gravitas Ventures just acquired North American rights to The Anthropologist, the documentary that explores climate change from Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, and Jeremy Newberger of Ironbound Films. In the film, the fate of the planet is considered from the perspective of American teenager Katie Crate. Over the course of five years, she travels alongside her mother Susie, an anthropologist studying the impact of climate change on indigenous communities. Their journey parallels that of renowned anthropologist Margaret Mead, who for decades sought to understand how global change affects remote cultures. The film will be released by Gravitas Ventures across all platforms in the U.S. and Canada this fall. The film has been selected by more than 30 film festivals across the nation. The deal was negotiated by Dan Fisher for Gravitas Ventures and Daniel A. Miller for Ironbound Films.
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Ciné-ONU: THE ANTHROPOLOGIST
20.05.2016 – “If we can’t stop the change that is coming, will we be able to change ourselves?” This question, core to the narrative of The Anthropologist, was discussed during Ciné-ONU’s post screening panel discussion on 19 May, an event which marked the 2016 Paris Climate Agreement.
Ciné-ONU screened yet another gripping documentary to an audience of over 300, this time focusing on the shocking impact of climate change on indigenous peoples. No sooner was the grand theatre of the Italian Cultural Institute plunged into darkness than we were swept on board the compelling journey of a young American teenager and her mother, an anthropologist, who together roamed the world for five years, studying the impact of climate change on the most vulnerable and hardest hit communities.
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Steven Spielberg to Present John Williams With AFI Life Achievement Award - Indiewire's Thursday Rundown
The Greenwich International Film Festival (GIFF) has announced its Opening Night Films and Closing Night Films in addition to its full film slate, and special programs for its second edition. The festival will open with narrative feature "Little Boxes" and documentary offering "The Anthropologist." The festival will close out with screenings of "Claire In Motion" and "Since: The Bombding of Pan Am Flight 103." The fest previously announced its centerpiece picks, including "The Fundamentals of Caring," "My Blind Brother" and "Newtown." The festival has also announced its plans to host a Ondi Timoner Retrospective and a Jewish Film Series as part of its rapidly expanding slate. The festival takes place in Greenwich, CT from June 9-12. You can check out more information on the festival here.
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Greenwich International Film Festival announces full film slate
The Greenwich International Film Festival (GIFF) today announced its Opening Night Films and Closing Night Films in addition to its full film slate, and special programs for its second edition, taking place June 9-12. The festival previously announced its Centerpiece Film Program, including THE FUNDAMENTALS OF CARING, MY BLIND BROTHER, and NEWTOWN as well as this year’s Changemaker Honorees, Trudie Styler and Abigail Breslin.
GIFF will kick off on June 9th with Opening Night screenings of LITTLE BOXES and the Connecticut Premiere of THE ANTHROPOLOGIST. LITTLE BOXES follows Clark, the new-in-town biracial kid in a sea of white. Discovering that to be cool he needs to act ‘more black,’ he fumbles to meet expectations, while his urban intellectual parents Mack and Gina also strive to adjust to small-town living. The Opening Night Documentary Feature, THE ANTHROPOLOGIST explores indigenous communities that are hit hardest by climate change.
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GIFF Opening Night & Party
The Anthropologist (Opening Night Documentary Film)
6:00 p.m. at Cole Auditorium
Followed by a Q&A
Told through the eyes of a cultural anthropologist and her teenage daughter, The Anthropologist opens a window into the indigenous communities that are hardest hit by climate change.
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INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL BOSTON: NON-FICTION
THE ANTHROPOLOGIST
It opens with clips of a woman pulling home movies out of a shelter. And for most of the runtime, that’s what The Anthropologist’s three directors provide: a halfway-natural look at the lives of a family on the move. Their subject is anthropologist Susie Crate (she’s focused on the effect of climate change on traditionalist cultures) and her teenaged daughter Katie (who agrees with her Mom’s politics but often seems annoyed by her work); the former takes the latter along for every field trip, be it Siberia, Peru, or the South Pacific for Christmas. Intersecting those clips are interview segments with Mary Catherine Bateson, daughter of famed mid-century anthropologist Margaret Mead. She has tenure, and so she digresses as she sees fit: At one point she speaks about the science of psychological change, and later she pontificates about how cool it is that President Obama’s mother was an anthropologist. Three generations of interconnected women give their take on the work that defines their lives, while the three directors try to create a sense of cultural exchange between their varied eras: On the soundtrack is a cover of “The Times They Are A-Changin’,” then it’s “Don’t You Forget About Me,” and after that it’s EDM.
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Five must-see movies at the Independent Film Festival Boston
We've found five must-see movies at the Independent Film Festival Boston, in town from April 27 to May 4, with star casts including locals like John Krasinski and Anna Kendrick, and Friends producer Kevin S. Bright.
The Anthropologist tells the stories of two women; Margaret Mead, who popularized cultural anthropology in America, and Susie Crate, an environmental anthropologist currently studying the impact of climate change. May 1 at 5:15 p.m. Somerville Theater, 55 Davis Sq., Somerville
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Cyrcadia Health Expands Breast Cancer Screening Trial to The Ohio State University
Cisco Systems, Inc. has financially supported the making of a documentary by Ironbound Films about the evolution of Cyrcadia technology, called “Detected Movie” to be released . Please visit http://www.DetectedMovie.com and Cyrcadia Health at http://www.cyrcadiahealth.com.
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RiverRun 2016: The Anthropologist
Katie doesn’t exactly want to be following her mom around the world, especially during Christmas.
The Anthropologist, which follows the mother-daughter duo from Siberia to the south Pacific, tracks the pair over a four-year period beginning when Katie is 14.
“I have great respect for what my mom is doing, but that doesn’t mean I want to be like her,” she says at one point in the film. But it’s their mostly supportive relationship that anchors the piece as the two learn about the ways climate change negatively impacts the lives of poor people worldwide.
The film also features the daughter of famous anthropologist Margaret Mead, which leads to some initial discord in the viewer’s mind because it isn’t exactly clear where the film will focus. With periodic personal details from Mead’s daughter, her role is more than that of an expert commentator but falls far below the focal point of the main pair, creating some confusion.
But now that you know that, you’ll be able to watch The Anthropologist with no hang-ups, trailing along for meetings with the Navy or hiking for glacial ice in South America. And just as interesting, viewers witness Katie’s growth and transformation with the benefit of her own insight.
The Anthropologist screens on April 14 at 7:30 p.m. at A/perture 2.
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2016 RIVERRUN INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL REVIEWS
The Anthropologist: Directed by Daniel Miller Any film that opens with Walter Murphy’s “A Fifth of Beethoven” is off on the right foot, and this engrossing documentary explores the life and career of noted anthropologist Margaret Mead, as told in the words of her daughter Mary Catherine Bateson, while simultaneously exploring the work being done by anthropologist Susie Crate, a single mother often accompanied by her own daughter Kate. As well as addressing various environmental concerns (with a particular emphasis on climate change), the film also works as a portrait of a working anthropologist and a teen-aged daughter who has crisscrossed the globe in her young life – thereby giving her a unique insight into various cultures – but who also, inevitably, butts heads with mom. That adds a nice personal touch to the proceedings (and the film’s message) … and love those end credits!
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THE JOHN HUGHES MOVIE OF CLIMATE CHANGE
Our globe never ceases to change, falter, adapt, and thrive. Thanks to those dedicated to study these transitions, what we learn from our past can help dictate the choices we make for our future. Daniel Miller, director of the 2008 film “The Linguists,” a film documenting languages on the verge of extinction, seeks to bring social sciences to life yet again with “The Anthropologist.”
“Anthropology is how we learn about changes through people,” Miller says. “This film brings a human face to climate change.”
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7 Must-See Eco Docs at One of the Best Film Festivals in America
#4 The Anthropologist profiles the lives of renowned anthropologists, Margaret Mead and Susan Crate, through the eyes of their daughters. While Mead’s groundbreaking work shaped the past, Crate’s work is the future. She has dedicated her career to studying the impact climate change has on indigenous people and their communities. The film follows Crate and her teenage daughter, Kathryn, who gains a unique cultural education through their travels. Mead’s daughter, Mary Catherine Bateson ( now in her seventies), followed in her mother’s footsteps as well, publishing several books and teaching anthropology at Harvard University and George Mason University. This compelling documentary shines a light on an often underrated discipline that’s incredibly vital to understanding the world around us. As these brilliant women demonstrate here, it’s also an important asset in enacting change. Seeing how they’ve passed the torch is inspiring; their passion for what they do is truly contagious. Through its footage of Crate’s expeditions, the film also paints a beautiful portrait of the cultural diversity of our planet.
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2016 Dallas International Film Festival Drops Full Lineup
Films eligible for the Silver Heart Award (Presented by the Embrey Family Foundation and bestowed on an individual or film for their dedication to fighting injustices and/or creating social change for the improvement of humanity. The Silver Heart Award winner receives a $10,000 cash prize courtesy of the Embrey Family Foundation) include: Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, and Jeremy Newberger’s THE ANTHROPOLOGIST, Fulton and Pepe’s THE BAD KIDS, Blair and Lange’s FARMER/VETERAN, Wang’s HOOLIGAN SPARROW, Dimmock and LaMarca’s THE PEARL, Maghami’s SONITA, and Jackson and Jackson’s UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT.
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Film: Funny, provocative fare at Women + Film
Through March 20. The Denver Film Society's year-round Women + Film program culminates with this week's Women + Film Festival, a six-day celebration (which began March 15) of documentaries, features and shorts highlighting the best in women-centric filmmaking. This weekend's highlights include tonight's Filmmaker Focus Panel presented by the Colorado Office of Film, Television, and Media, the late-addition comedy "Maggie's Plan" and provocative titles such as "The Babushkas of Chernobyl" (March 19) and "Trapped" (March 20). A full schedule of the fest, which wraps up March 20, is at denverfilm.org. $100 festival pass or $12 per film. Sie FilmCenter, 2510 E. Colfax Ave. 303-595-3456.
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Green Screen: Festival films need to eco beyond audiences
The South African Eco Film Festival is back this March with a mixture of local surprises and global award-winners in the bag. Now in its third year, it would be within the festival’s rights to develop a bit of an eco (see what we did there?). The festival, convened by NPO While You Were Sleeping, has expanded steadily annually, and this year is no exception. But how important are such initiatives, who are they reaching, and are we thinking about environmental education in the right way?
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Mathews Film Society screening tackles climate change
Anthropologist Karen Holmberg and Professor Susan Crate will lead a discussion Friday night on climate change and its affect on native cultures at a film screening hosted by the Mathews Film Society.
Crate is a professor of Anthropology at George Mason University, according to a news released from the film society. Her work is the subject of“The Anthropologist" - a five year journey around the globe observing a variety of cultures, including a stop on Gloucester County.
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RiverRun Announces Their 2016 Films With Class Lineup
The RiverRun International Film Festival has announced three films to be showcased during the upcoming Festival ( to run April 7-17). These films, part of RiverRun’s Films With Class educational outreach program, will be privately screened by Winston-Salem/Forsyth County School students as well as shown to the general public during the Festival. RiverRun will announce the full film lineup for this year’s Festival on March 7, 2016, which will be accessible to the public the following day.
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Port Jeff Documentary Series returns with fervor
On March 28, the Long Island Museum will host a screening of “The Anthropologist,” a film that tells the stories of anthropologists Margaret Mead and Susie Crate through their daughters’ perspectives. The film highlights how people all over the world, from Siberia to the Chesapeake, deal with changes in culture and the environment. The documentary won the Best Environmental Film award at the Nevada International Film Festival. The film is presented in six different languages. Director Daniel Miller will speak after the screening.
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URI celebrates World Anthropology Day
The University of Rhode Island’s anthropology department celebrated World Anthropology Day on Thursday, Feb. 18, by screening a special film.
“The Anthropologist” made it’s world premiere that day, highlighting the role that current anthropologists play today in addressing the effects of climate change towards indigenous communities. The film followed Anthropologist Susan Crate and her daughter Katie over the course of five years during their travels to indigenous communities all over the world.
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Documentaries added to RiverRun
The RiverRun International Film Festival announced three documentaries that will be a part of its “Films With Class” educational outreach program this year.
The films are: “The Anthropologist,” which examines cultural anthropologist Margaret Mead and environmental anthropologist Susie Crate; “Help Us Find Sunil Tripathi,” about the search for a missing college student who was later misidentified in connection to the 2013 Boston bombing; and “My Love Affair with the Brain: The Life and Science of Dr. Marian Diamond,” about a doctor who studies the human brain.
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Big screen fest tackles big problems
Filmmaker Daniel Miller is especially excited to have his film “The Anthropologist” — “a climate change and coming-of-age film” — shown at the mountaineering center on Feb. 18. Not only is it a “mountain film,” Miller said, it coincides with World Anthropology Day. The main screening will take place at the festival in Golden, he said, but “The Anthropologist” will also be screened at 22 universities and theatres worldwide on that same day.
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World Anthropology Day
Join the worldwide screening of THE ANTHROPOLOGIST on February 18, 2016 in association with the American Anthropological Association. To set up a screening contract Daniel A. Miller at miller@ironboundfilms.com.
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NJ.com: 8 best things to do in N.J. this weekend
"The Anthropologist," a new film from director Seth Kramer, will be screened on Friday at 8 p.m. at MONDO Summit, at an event curated by The Film Society of Summit. The film "considers the fate of the planet from the perspective of an American teenager" — Katie, the daughter of environmental anthropologist Susie Crate. Crate looks at how indigenous people cope with climate change. The film also includes a look at the work of famed anthropologist Margaret Mead and her daughter, Mary Catherine Bateson, also an anthropologist. Kramer will answer questions after the screening. $12-$14. Friday, 8 p.m. MONDO Summit, 426 Springfield Avenue, Summit. 973-969-4535.
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TAPINTO.NET: 'The Anthropologist' Looks at Effects of Climate Change Through Teenager's Eyes; Film Screens at MONDO Jan. 22
SUMMIT, NJ - The Film Society of Summit will present the first area screening of "The Anthropologist," a film that contemplate the fate of the planet from the perspective of an American teenager, January 22 at MONDO. Over a five-year period, the teen travels alongside her mother, an anthropologist studying the impact of climate change on indigenous communities.
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REALSCREEN: Exclusive clip: “Anthropologist” joins new guard of enviro-docs
Just weeks after its world premiere at DOC NYC in November, The Anthropologist is being presented at the UN Climate Change Conference in Paris today (December 7). Directors Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller and Jeremy Newberger of Ironbound Films tell realscreen how their film looks to move the dialog forward for environmental docs.
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CNN: 'Evocateur' doc makers on how Morton Downey Jr changed TV
The producers of "Evocateur: The Morton Downey Jr Movie" describe about how the infamous shock TV host influenced political media. It premieres on CNN Aug. 20 at 9 p.m. ET.
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NY TIMES: ‘Évocateur’ on CNN Revisits the Bullying and Bluster of Morton Downey Jr.
Between what went on in the first Republican presidential debate and what goes on daily on social media, it sometimes seems that browbeating, not baseball, is America’s pastime. Morton Downey Jr. certainly didn’t invent public nastiness. For verification, see the campaign posters from presidential contests of a century or a century and a half ago. But his nationally syndicated talk show in the 1980s gave bullying and bluster a new prominence. “The Morton Downey Jr. Show” didn’t last long, but others soon picked up the banner and continue to carry it today.
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