Sunday, September 21, 2008

Under Rich Earth has Cross-over Appeal!

I’m very pleased to say that Canada’s leading mining journal, Northern Miner, has recommended Under Rich Earth as “classic example for companies on how not to handle community relations.”

From the Northern Miner:

Were you a shareholder of Denver’s Ascendant Copper (now Copper Mesa
Mining) when it crashed and burned at its doomed Junin project in
Ecuador in 2006? Then you may want to check out the feature-length
documentary Under Rich Earth, which debuted at the Toronto Film
Festival. Directed and produced by left-leaning, rookie Canadian
filmmaker Malcolm Rogge, the film uniquely documents the bickering
between the peasants who wanted to keep their farmland as is, and
local contractors ineptly trying to advance the Junin porphyry copper
deposit, which hosts an inferred 982 million tonnes grading 0.89%
copper plus moly and silver credits.

Regrettably, the company didn’t want to participate in the film, and
the director fails to put the conflict into the broader context of
resource development in Ecuador and the Third World. In this respect,
the film likely won’t become a touchstone for anti-mining and
anti-capitalist agitators. But it is worthwhile for those with a
specific interest in Junin and as a classic example for companies on
how not to handle community relations.

posted by Malcolm at 6:11 pm  

Friday, September 12, 2008

“An outstanding work of hard journalism”

Read the review by Michael Sauve - Toronto Film Programmes Blog - September 11, 2008

posted by Malcolm at 12:30 pm  

Thursday, September 11, 2008

More Rave Reviews for Under Rich Earth

Marc Glassman - Classical 96.3 FM:
Hot Docs at TIFF

This evening at TIFF two excellent documentaries will be screening—and luckily, it’s possible to see both tonight. Under Rich Earth, the first feature doc by Torontonian Malcolm Rogge and Upstream Battle by Scottish filmmaker Ben Kempas are tough, lucid films about human rights and the environment. A better—or more relevant–double-bill would be hard to find. Rogge’s film has its premiere screening at the AMC 2 at 8:45 pm while Kempas’ first repeat showing is at AMC 9 at 6 pm, so festival goers impressed by these two docs selected by TIFF’s Thom Powers will experience no difficulty “traveling” between cinemas.

Under Rich Earth is a startling exposé of a Canadian company’s suspect dealings in Ecuador. Ascendant Copper—what a monicker!—is a Toronto based firm which has mining interests in countries other than Canada. The Junin region in northwestern Ecuador is one area in which the corporation has invested—to their detriment.

Influenced by a negative ecological assessment made by Japanese interests in the ‘90s, the local Ecuadorian community decided to fight the mining company. Their opinions are obvious: they want to maintain the beautiful land and “rich earth” for their children. The copper company, through local representatives, fought back, at first legally—but tension between the two grew, as time passed.

Finally, Ascendant Copper sent in paramilitary troops to scare the locals into surrendering their land. But the community proved to be resilient—and actually caught 56 of the troopers, who, to be fair, were shooting bullets in the air and pepper spray, not killing anyone.

Rogge’s film captures that fight and the ensuing victory of the agricultural workers over the mining corporation. Under Rich Earth is a graceful, well made, verité doc.

Upstream Battle also chronicles a fight between Natives and corporations. A series of dams has affected the eco-system in northern California, where the Karuk, Yurok and Hoopa tribes have fished salmon for centuries. After toxic waste caused the death of 70,000 salmon in 2002, the situation went from bad to disastrously worse. The tribes joined forces to fight the hydro producing company that was profiting from this exploitation of natural resources.

Enter filmmaker Ben Kempas, a veteran doc-maker from Scotland, who became interested in the story when Native tribal leaders went to Scottish Power, then the owner of the dams, to ask them to cease and desist. Years of negotiation followed, all expertly chronicled by Kempas.

One gets to know First Nations leaders like Merv and Wendy George, who upset stereotypes by being smart and contemporary in their analysis of the problem. But just when it looks that a solution might occur, Scottish Power sells its interests to Berkshire Hathaway, the corporation owned by Warren Buffet. And everything stalls again…

Filmmakers who don’t impose a flashy style on their stories have directed Upstream Battle and Under Rich Earth. Both Ben Kempas and Malcolm Rogge have made works in the grand tradition of socially and politically oriented documentaries: they’ve let the issues dictate the direction of their films. Like great journalism, these films impart knowledge to the viewer in a clean, linear manner, without losing sight of the complexity of the stories being told.

Both deserve to be seen by wide audiences

See the review

posted by Malcolm at 11:23 am  

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Filmmaker Arrested in Nigeria Oil Region

“LAGOS, Nigeria — An American documentary filmmaker and his interpreter working in the volatile Delta region of Nigeria have been arrested and accused of spying, according to Nigerian government officials and media watchdog groups. Andrew Berends, a New York-based freelance filmmaker and journalist who was working on a film about the oil-producing Delta region, was arrested on Sunday and held overnight. “They didn’t let me sleep or eat or drink water for the first 36 hours,” he said Tuesday night.

See the article in the New York Times

Update: Thursday, Sep 4, 2008

“Documentary filmmaker Andrew Berends was arrested in Nigeria on August 31st and has been detained by the SSS since then. They have made allegations of espionage against him,which can be punishable by death in Nigeria. They are also detaining his Nigerian translator, who has not been heard from since Monday.

This is an urgent and serious matter facing one of our own. Andy’s been making his new film, DELTA BOYS in Nigeria for the past couple of months. He was just a recipient of the Gucci Doc Fund for the film.”

Learn more

What you can do to help

“In the few days since Andy was detained we’ve managed to bang a lot of drums and garner considerable attention, but we can’t let the story “go cold” for Andy’s sake, and that of his interpreter. Please share this information with anyone you know in the media, and please take the time to contact your elected officials to apply some governmental pressure, as outlined in the blog.”

From: Marjan Safinia
Director/Producer
merge:media
www.mergemedia.tv
marj@mergemedia.tv

posted by Malcolm at 11:04 am  

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