Imagining a World Beyond Resource Colonialism: Powerlands coming to your city
Join us at screenings in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New Orleans, Santa Fe, Arizona, Virginia, Massachusetts, London, and Pennsylvania
Our new film, Powerlands, has had an amazing journey. We just returned from nearly three weeks of screenings across England, at movie theaters, community centers, for high school and college students, at revolutionary convergences, and at an antifascist football club. We loved this thoughtful review of one of our screenings in northern England.
We also had a powerful screening hosted by D.C. Environmental Justice Coalition in Anacostia, won Best Cinematography from the Tacoma Film Festival, and the Rigoberta Menchú Grand Prize in Canada.
You can catch the film (and usually an in-person Q&A with myself or Ivey Camille Manybeads Tso) at upcoming screenings at Portland Film Festival this Saturday, Santa Fe Independent Film Festival on Sunday, Charlottesville, Virginia November 4, New Orleans Film Festival November 7, The American Indian Film Festival in San Francisco November 8, and Red Nation Film Festival in Los Angeles on November 11.
Other upcoming screenings include Bucknell University in Pennsylvania on October 26, Centre Film Festival in Central Pennsylvania, Northern Arizona University November 15, at the Facing Race conference in Phoenix, Arizona November 18, UMass Amherst December 1, (in addition to screenings at UMass Lowell and Salem State University), and back in London December 8, at a screening co-presented by legendary filmmaker Ken Loach.
For previous updates on Powerlands and a description of the film, see this link, or our website, our trailer, or see this interview about Powerlands on Democracy Now. You can follow Ivey Camille Manybeads Tso here.
Thank you to all of you for your support in getting these stories out in the world.
Here are some older links!
35+ Revolutionary Films to Inspire You
A short film about Mutual Aid in New Orleans
A short film about Palestinian workers
An anticapitalist guide to the best films of 2021