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For Immediate Release November 4, 2009 |
News Services Office 310 Owen Hall, Campus PO 1820 Asheville, NC 28804-8507 828/251-6526 - FAX: 828/251-6677 Web: http://www.unca.edu/news e-mail: news@unca.edu |
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UNC Asheville Student Group to Host Sixth Annual Human Rights Film
Festival;
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UNC Asheville’s Amnesty International Student
Chapter will hold its sixth annual Human Rights Film Festival
November 9-13. Five films will be shown at 7 p.m. in UNC Asheville’s
Highsmith University Union. Each film will be followed by a
discussion led by a UNC Asheville professor, student or community
member. The festival, which has become the largest of its kind in
the Southeast, is free and open to the public.
“Waltz with Bashir,” an animated documentary about the 1982 Lebanon
war, will be shown Monday, Nov. 9, in UNC Asheville’s Highsmith
University Union Grotto. The film follows director Ari Folman’s
quest to unveil his own forgotten memories of his experience in
Israeli Army during the first Lebanon war.
“Crude,” a cinema-verite feature which explores the law case known
as the Amazon Chernobyl, will be shown Tuesday, Nov. 10, in UNC
Asheville’s Highsmith University Union Grotto. The film subverts the
conventions of advocacy filmmaking by presenting the controversial
case from many viewpoints. The landmark case takes place in the
Amazon jungle of Ecuador, pitting 30,000 indigenous and colonial
rainforest dwellers against the U.S. oil giant Chevron.
“Burma VJ,” a documentary following the story of young Burmese video
journalists, will be shown Wednesday, Nov. 11, in UNC Asheville’s
Highsmith University Union, room 104. Risking torture and life in
jail, young citizens of Burma insist on keeping up the flow of news
from their closed country. The film offers a unique insight into
high-risk journalism and dissidence in a police state, while at the
same time providing a thorough documentation of the days of
September 2007, when the Buddhist monks started marching.
“Pray the Devil Back to Hell,” which chronicles the story of
Liberian women who worked to end civil war in their country, will be
shown Thursday, Nov. 12, in UNC Asheville’s Highsmith University
Union Grotto. The film documents the efforts of thousands of women
who came together to nonviolently force a resolution during the
stalled peace talks in Liberia.
“Hunger,” a film exploring the 1981 Irish Republican Army hunger
strike, will be shown Friday, Nov. 13, in UNC Asheville’s Highsmith
University Union Grotto. The film, starring Michael Fassbender as
Bobby Sands, dramatizes events in a Northern Ireland prison during
the six weeks prior to Sands death.
For more information, call Mark Gibney, UNC Asheville professor of
political science and Belk Chair of Humanities, at 828/250-3870.
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