Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
The Garden
View Larger Image

The Garden | DVD

Starring: Danny Glover, Daryl Hannah, Antonio Villaraigosa
Directed By: Scott Hamilton Kennedy

List Price: $29.99  
Price:  $27.49
You Save:  $2.50 (8%)
Available:  Usually ships in 24 hours

Binding:  DVD
Rating:  NR (Not Rated)
Run Time:  80 minutes
Format:  Color, DVD, NTSC
Studio:  Oscilloscope Laboratories
Number of Discs:  1
Aspect Ratio:  1.33:1
Release Date:  August 18, 2009
Sales Rank:  27,833th

FEATURES

  • Oscar-nominated for Best Documentary in 2008 THE GARDEN has been hailed by critics as the most astute and powerful political film of the year. Filmmaker Scott Hamilton Kennedy s (award-winning director of OT: OUR TOWN) brilliantly captures, in a series of explosive and wrenching turn of events, the ways greedy developers, inept politicians and self-serving community leaders can run rough shod over


EDITORIAL REVIEWS


Product Description
THE GARDEN is an engaging and powerful look at the famous political and social battle over the largest community garden in the U.S (located in south central Los Angeles). A follow-up to Kennedy's award-winning documentary, OT: OUR TOWN, the film shows how the politics of power and greed (backroom deals, land developing, green politics, money) tragically intersect with working class families who rely on this communal garden for their livelihood. Equal parts THE WIRE and HARLAN COUNTY, USA, THE GARDEN, exposes the fault lines in American society and raises crucial and challenging questions about liberty, equality, and justice for the poorest and most vulnerable among us. Kenneth Turan of the LA Times said: It's tempting to call THE GARDEN a story of innocence and experience, of evil corrupting paradise, but that would be doing a disservice to the fascinating complexities of a classic Los Angeles conflict and an excellent documentary that does them full justice.


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 6 reviews)

Must See Documentary by Cheryl R. Revkin (los angeles) 5 Stars
October 26, 2009
Extremely well made, relevant doc that address class, race, politics and the environment. It will make you relfect on your own actions and then take action.

A quagmire of unmentioned issues by C. M. McGarry 2 Stars
August 23, 2009
While the film itself is interesting and well done, the biggest problem I have with this film is its lie of omission. At its core, the film is about a simple property rights issue, however the director chooses not to focus on the real issues of the conflict, instead focusing on the plight of the urban poor and painting all others involved as "greedy, evil politicians and developers". Its not mentioned if the people farming the land had ever had any right to do so to begin with, regardless of whether the property was owned by the district, city, or a private entity. Perhaps they should have bothered to secure the right to use the land for agricultural purposes to begin with. But to not do so, and then claim that they have eminent domain over the land because they have put it to use is not a valid argument to seize private or public property. If the owner of the property happened to be a better cook than any of them, could he make the case that he should seize ownership of their kitchens? If I (and three of my neighbors) can put your back yard to use better than you can, does that give me the right to claim ownership of it? Its this issue that is not directly addressed by anyone but the owner of the property at the end of the film (complete with "evil" rock music and scenes of crying protesters and bulldozers) which is the core and cause of the situation. The farmers and the filmmaker conveniently decided to omit much discussion of the origin of or ways of property rights upon which our entire society is based. This is not to say I agree with it, but to mostly ignore it is asinine. Mostly good film, minus the blatant and intentional appeal to emotion rather than the issue itself.

one of the best documentaries i've seen! by Jennifer Stroup (Long Beach, CA) 5 Stars
August 20, 2009
wow wow wow. i'm an LA resident and was horrified by the injustice i saw between councilwoman jan perry and scumbag land owner ralph horwitz. jan has her hands so deep in the money bag, obliviously on the take, while horwitz is too busy being racist. amazing and so glad this was documented on film. i'm sorry i was not more involved with this movement. rent/buy this film to see what i'm talking about. worth it on all levels. at least it will get you thinking one way or another.

Good Use of Available Documents by Mike In NYC 4 Stars
August 17, 2009
I saw this film at an IFC screening in NYC that included a Q&A with the director afterward. People who advocate of the rights of the poor to use under-used urban land almost universally love this film. I suspect the director shares their sympathies. What usually goes unnoticed as far as the story is concerned is that the city took private land through eminent domain and then failed to use the land for any of the public purposes for which land seizures are normally reserved. After the passage of several years, the city then sold the land back to the original owner at the price they'd originally paid him. On the surface, this does not seem 'unfair'. However, in the interim poor immigrants, many of whom were presumably undocumented, began to farm the land. That Hamilton failed to document whether or not these people were undocumented, whether any particular viewer feels this is germane or not, is a minor flaw in the film. Of course, their immigration status would have been a difficult topic to broach with the immigrants themselves and might have changed the filmmaker's access to the immigrant community, but it might also have served to highlight the differences between the immigrant community and the allegedly corrupt city counselors who were elected by the poor Black residents of the area. Be that as it may, Hamilton does a good job with the documents available to present the complexity of the situation, if only in passing. I spoke to Hamilton after the screening. He'd already sold the few DVDs he had with him for $20 and urged me to call or email him for a copy. I've done both, but only get an answering machine or a form email telling me the DVD is available, because of my university affiliation, for $310, even though I have no plans to use the DVD in an educational setting.

loved this doc by Nick (Brooklyn) 4 Stars
July 09, 2009
I saw this movie at Cinema Village in NY and was so impressed by its raw, fly-on-the-wall approach. Being a New Yorker I knew nothing of the plight of these farmers in South Central LA and their attempts to take on greedy developers and city hall to save their community garden, but this story has universal appeal. An enthralling and necessary doc.

SIMILAR PRODUCTS


Trouble the Water

Trouble the Water
Starring: Kimberly Rivers Roberts, Scott Roberts
Directed By: Carl Deal, Tia Lessin

2008 Academy Award Nominee for Best Documentary Feature, this astonishingly powerful film is at once horrifying and exhilarating. Directed and produced by Tia Lessin and Carl Deal (producers, Fahrenheit 9/11 and Bowling for Columbine), Trouble the Water takes you inside Hurricane Katrina in a way never before seen on screen. The film opens the day before the storm makes landfall--just blocks away from the French Quarter but far from the New Orleans that most tourists knew. Kimberly Rivers...

The Class (Entre Les Murs)

The Class (Entre Les Murs)
Starring: François Bégaudeau, Agame Malembo-Emene, Angélica Sancio, Arthur Fogel, Boubacar Toure
Directed By: Laurent Cantet
Also With: François Bégaudeau (Writer), Pierre Milon (Cinematographer), Laurent Cantet (Writer), Robin Campillo (Editor), Robin Campillo (Writer), Carole Scotta (Producer), Caroline Benjo (Producer)


Genre: Drama
Rating: PG13
Release Date: 11-AUG-2009
Media Type: DVD

Food, Inc.

Food, Inc.
Starring: Eric Schlosser
Directed By: Robert Kenner

Food, Inc. lifts the veil on our nation's food industry, exposing how our nation's food supply is now controlled by a handful of corporations that often put profit ahead of consumer health, the
livelihood of the American farmer, the safety of workers and our own environment. Food, Inc. reveals surprising and often shocking truths about what we eat, how it's produced and who we have become as a nation.

Q&A with Producer/Director Robert Kenner, Co-Producer/Food Expert Eric...

The Betrayal

The Betrayal
Directed By: Ellen Kuras

Academy Award nominee - Best Documentary Feature
Filmed over 23 years, The Betrayal is the directorial debut of renowned cinematographer Ellen Kuras (Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Away We Go) in a remarkable collaboration with the film s subject and co-director Thavisouk Phrasavath.

During the Vietnam War, the United States government waged its own secret war in the neighboring country of Laos. When the U.S. withdrew, thousands of Laotians who fought alongside American...

Sugar

Sugar
Starring: Algenis Perez Soto, Rayniel Rufino, Andre Holland, Ann Whitney, Ellary Porterfield
Directed By: Anna Boden, Ryan Fleck
Also With: Anna Boden (Producer), Anna Boden (Writer), Ryan Fleck (Writer), Denton Hanna (Producer), Jamie Patricof (Producer), Jeremy Kipp Walker (Producer)

Sugar is the inspirational story of Miguel Santos, a gifted pitcher struggling to make it to the big leagues of American baseball. Nicknamed "Azúcar" (Spanish for "sugar"), 19-year-old Miguel travels from his poor but tightly-knit community in the Dominican Republic to play minor league baseball in the United States - where anything is possible. He finds himself in a small Iowa town, where he struggles with the culture, the language, and the pressure of knowing that only his success can rescue...

© 2009 BrightSurf.com