16 Feb - 3 March at Cinema Nova
"At times like this, it's important to remember that there are dedicated people making the world a better place. None of us are helpless and the films in the Transitions Festival will inspire you to get involved." - Corinne Grant, Festival Ambassador
Transitions Film Festival returns to Cinema Nova this February with an inspiring line up of world-changing documentaries. The festival kicks off on the 16th of February and will tour to Sydney, Brisbane and Adelaide.
This year's program showcases films about innovation, activism and heroism, and covers a broad range of themes, including: ethical fashion, health and wellness, mindfulness, impact entrepreneurship, climate change, immortality, and the future of work and death in an age of automation.
The festival opens with the Victorian premiere of How to Let Go of the World and Love All the Things Climate Can't Change, the highly anticipated feature film from Oscar-nominated director of Gasland, Josh Fox, and closes with Power To Change: Energy Rebellion, a beautiful cinematic snapshot of the energy revolution taking place in Germany.
Other festival highlights include The Age of Consequences, which looks at the impacts of climate change through a military lens, Wastecooking, which follows a quirky and gregarious Austrian on an adventure tour around Europe as he prepares feasts from food-scraps in an attempt to change the food system, and There Will be Water, a fly-on-the-wall film about an ambitious engineer and his attempt to solve food and water crises in the desert by using solar power to desalinate sea water.
The festival will premiere four Australian feature documentaries, including: RAW, a beautifully uplifting story about two 60 year old Australians who attracted international media attention when they ran 366 consecutive marathons to promote the benefits of a raw vegan diet, The Bentley Effect, an empowering portrait of the Northern Rivers' successful resistance to fracking in NSW, Our Power, a harrowing look at the 45-day Hazelwood mine-fires and a communities transition to the clean energy economy, and Esteem, the latest film from Melbourne based filmmaker Peter Charles Downey, which explores the relationship between personal psychology and the environment.
Water is a central theme, with several films exploring the threats faced by our most precious, life-sustaining element. RiverBlue takes viewers on a journey towards an ethical fashion industry that doesn't pollute rivers, A Plastic Ocean offers solutions to the heart-wrenching problem of ubiquitous plastic pollution and its impacts on the food chain, White Waves spotlights the heroic feats of the Surfrider Foundation and their quest to keep the seas clean, and What Lies Below follows the story of a blind fisherman as he tackles the problem of unsustainable fishing from a unique perspective.
The 2017 Festival also adds a new health and wellness stream, with the highly anticipated The Pursuit of Silence, director Patrick Shen's (Philosopher Kings) latest meditation on the power of noise-free moments, Planting the Seeds of Mindfulness, an exploration of how mindfulness can improve the lives and well-being of children, and H.O.P.E What You Eat Matters, a reflection on the benefits of a plant-based diet for animals, people and planet.
Other highlights of this year's festival include a range of films that showcase the transformational power of new economic forces. The University paints a portrait of Ray Kurzwiel and Peter Diamandis' Singularity University, a school that aims to nurture students to create projects that will positively impact the lives of over a billion people in under ten years. The Chocolate Case follows an intrepid Dutch journalist as he attempts to have himself imprisoned for eating a bar of chocolate, and then goes on to create the world's first 'slave-free' chocolate bar. The New Economy explores and highlights the benefits of co-ops and The Future of Work and Death investigates the massive implications of a world where automation is ubiquitous and immortality is a reality.
The complete program includes over 25 feature documentaries as well as a speaker program featuring leading sustainability academics, artists and entrepreneurs. The Melbourne festival takes place as part of the Sustainable Living Festival Australia, which runs throughout February.
The Transitions Film Festival runs from the 16th of February until the 3rd of March at Cinema Nova.
The Transitions Film Festival is dedicated to showcasing inspirational documentaries about the social and technological innovations, revolutionary ideas and trailblazing change makers that are leading the way to a better world.
FULL PROGRAM (MELBOURNE)
HOW TO LET GO OF THE WORLD AND LOVE ALL THE THINGS CLIMATE CAN'T CHANGE (VICTORIAN PREMIERE) THURSDAY 16 FEB, 7:00 >> CINEMA NOVA >> WITH MC CORINNE GRANT
In How to Let Go of the World and Love All the Things Climate Can't Change, Oscar Nominated director Josh Fox (Gasland) continues in his deeply personal style, investigating climate change – the greatest threat our world has ever known.
RAW (AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE) FRIDAY 17 FEB 6:30 & SAT 18, 12:30PM >> CINEMA NOVA >> FOLLOWED BY Q&A WITH FILMMAKER AND GUESTS INCLUDING PHILLIP WOLLEN (KINDNESS HOUSE) AND THE SUBJECTS OF THE FILM, ALAN MURRAY AND JANETTE MURRAY-WAKELIN.
Cancer survivor Janette and her partner Alan are an incredible demonstration of what is possible with the human body. This story follows the two raw food champions in their 60s as they break world records by running 366 consecutive marathons on a raw plant-based diet.
THE CHOCOLATE CASE (AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE) FRIDAY 17 FEB 8:45 >> CINEMA NOVA >> PRESENTED BY LUSH
The Chocolate Case follows the incredible journey of three intrepid Dutch Journalists, who after uncovering child slavery in the cocoa production chain, try to persuade large corporations to end the use of child labour. Rebuffed by the industry, and after failed attempts at self-imprisonment, they set out on a mission to develop the first 'slave-free' chocolate bar called -Tony's Chocolonely', now one of Holland's leading brands.
PLANTING SEEDS OF MINDFULNESS (AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE) SATURDAY 18 FEB 10:30 AM >> CINEMA NOVA
Planting Seeds of Mindfulness is a beautifully animated feature documentary based on the book by world-renowned meditation practitioner Thich Nhat Hanh, -Planting Seeds: Practising Mindfulness With Children'.
THE C WORD (AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE) SATURDAY 18 FEB 2:45 >> CINEMA NOVA
From Executive Producer Morgan Freeman, The C Word follows the powerful stories of celebrated French neuroscientist and cancer revolutionary Dr.David Servan-Schreiber and the film's director Meghan O'hara on their unconventional battles against cancer and their journeys from diagnosis to wellness.
H.O.P.E. WHAT YOU EAT MATTERS (AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE) SUNDAY 19 FEB >> 12:30
Featuring Jane Goodall and Vanada Shiva, as well as health and environmental experts, H.O.P.E, What You Eat Matters, shows the benefits that plant-based diets can have on both people and planet.
PURSUIT OF SILENCE (AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE) SUNDAY 19 FEB 2:30 >> CINEMA NOVA
Beginning with an ode to John Cage's ground-breaking composition 4'33", In Pursuit of Silence takes us on an immersive cinematic journey around the globe – from a traditional tea ceremony in Kyoto, to the streets of the loudest city on the planet – and instantly inspires us to experience silence and celebrate the wonders of our world.
GENERATION STARTUP (ADVANCED PREVIEW) MONDAY 20 FEB 6:00 >> GENERAL ASSEMBLY>> FOLLOWED BY FORUM WITH THAT STARTUP SHOW AND OTHER STARTUP EXPERTS
Generation Startup takes us to the front lines of entrepreneurship in America, capturing the struggles and triumphs of six 'Venture for America' fellows who put everything on the line to build startups in Detroit, a city moving towards a new embodiment of innovation and prosperity.
RIVERBLUE (AUSTRALIAN PREMIERE) TUESDAY 21 FEB 6:30 >> CINEMA NOVA >>
Narrated by Jason Priestley, RiverBlue follows follows internationally celebrated river conservationist Mark Angelo on a round the world journey that uncovers the dark side of the fashion industry and the solutions to river pollution.
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