Posts Tagged ‘no impact man’

The Best of Sundance 2009: The Documentaries Have It

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

We Live in Public

We Live in Public

It’s Saturday night in Park City and another festival is winding down. The first weekend of the festival is always the most chaotic and crowded. I find the second weekend more pleasant even if it is a bit sad to see things coming to a close. Shuttle buses are less frequent, people more relaxed. For the first time in ten days it is snowing, and with the weather everyone seems to be mellowing out, finding some place to stay warm.

I had a ticket to the Grand Jury Prize Documentary Award winning film - and had settled down into a cozy seat in the Library theater, waiting for the announcement as to which film it would be. I was slightly disappointed to hear it was something I’d seen just yesterday - I’d been hoping to catch something I’d missed - but in hindsight the award makes complete sense: Ondi Timoner’s We Live in Public was disturbing but brilliant, a powerful portrait of an internet pioneer with a remarkable vision of the future we are living now. Unlike many of the documentaries that played at Sundance this year, this one (by the director of Dig!) makes inventive and entertaining use of the possibilities of the medium, and was definitely not made for a PBS audience.

I’ve seen just over 30 films here in Park City, at both Sundance and Slamdance, and in my opinion this is the strongest lineup I’ve encountered in the years I’ve been coming to the festival. As usual, the documentaries tend to be among the best that Sundance has to offer. While I was laughing out loud at Black Dynamite, amused and entertained by Larry Fessenden and Ron Perlman’s performances in We Sell the Dead, intrigued by the ideas in Moon and in the even more profound The Clone Returns Home and even brought to tears by Slamdance’s Mississippi Damned, it was the documentary films that will have a lasting impact on my thoughts and attitudes and actions. (more…)

Sundance Docs: “No Impact Man” makes a big splash

Sunday, January 18th, 2009
Colin Beavan (aka No Impact Man) and daughter Colin Beavan (aka No Impact Man) and daughter

 

Author Colin Beavan was tired of writing about the problems that face our world and merely talking about environmental change.  He decided the time had come to try out change on himself, and convinced his wife and 2-year old daughter to go along.  The idea was to see whether they could be happy without being consumers and without contributing to the many pressures that modern lifestyles place upon the earth.  He dubbed himself, “No Impact Man” and created a blog and a couple friends decided to document the process. When it was all over, he thought, he could write a book.  Simple enough, it seems, but nothing is ever quite as simple as it seems. (more…)