this post was submitted on 18 Dec 2023
9 points (84.6% liked)

Documentaries (Moved to Lemmy.cafe)

1521 readers
2 users here now

ATTN: We're moving instances! Please join us at [email protected]

Hope to see you there!

A place to post documentaries about anything!

Interested in a community more focused on Solarpunk & Anarchist Documentaries? Check out [email protected]

Rules:

  1. Documentaries Only: Posts which are not documentaries will be removed.

  2. Posting format: DocumentaryTitle - "optional short description of the documentary" followed by duration [00:00:00]. The use of [Trailer] or [Preview] tag is required. A (CC) tag is strongly encouraged.

  3. Post Correct Title: Ensure the documentary title is correct. The title is often not the same as the YouTube submission

  4. Be respectful and civil, no threats, troll or harassment

  5. No torrents

  6. No far-right / pro-dictatorship propaganda

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/2356320

This excellent documentary takes us into another world; the world of rogue loggers and firefighters turned eco-warriors. The story begins as an arsonist burns 9000 acres of protected old-growth public forest in Oregon that can not be logged unless it burns. To stop the proposed "salvage" logging of this incredible ancient forest, citizens are moved to blockade a road and keep the government out. After facing down a bulldozer and the State Police, the fort now known as the gateway to the Cascadia Free State becomes the focus for a developing community dedicated to protecting ancient forests throughout the mountains of Oregon.

The film shows confrontations with disgruntled loggers, mass arrests and a 75 day hunger strike. Back at Warner Creek activists build teepees and remain a living blockade on the logging road through the winter and ten feet of snow. Political pressure begins to shift and the White House promises a deal but not before Federal Agents come to bust the camp and destroy the fort. The story resolves with incredible footage of a mass jail break-in and unconditional victory for the forest. This inspiring documentary is two years in the making, and crafted from footage shot by more than two dozen people involved in the struggle to save Warner Creek. Principal photography and direction are by guerilla videographer Tim Lewis, award winner at WorldFest in 1998. Codirector/producer Tim Ream was involved in the action on and off the screen.

all 1 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old