For Immediate Release

2009 film schedule

Program Guide

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Venues in Oakland

Oakland filmmakers

Thinking local
reaching international

UPCOMING EVENTS:

OCTOBER 1ST
OIFF PRESS CONFERENCE ON PEACE

STAY TUNED FOR DETAILS


THE EAST BAY EXPRESS PRESENTS:

TASTE OF ART FUNDRAISER FOR MO'BETTER FOOD, THE OAKLAND INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL AND RIVER OF WORDS

OCTOBER 2ND


 



BURIED IN EARTHSKIN

Running time:  50 minutes and 33 seconds.
Date of completion: 30 June 2009
Language: English and Afrikaans with English subtitles.

Helena Kingwill, a journalist and concerned South African citizen - sets off on a road trip to follow the route the nuclear waste trucks take to the dump in Namaqualand.
  She meets men and women of the Nama-Khoi tribe, who live nearby, and listens to their untold stories of accidents at the dump and their fears of the underground water becoming polluted.
  The second leg of her journey takes Helena to Pelindaba, the nuclear research centre near Pretoria. She speaks to officials, who tell her that the waste they are about to bury in a pipe storage facility near the city, will remain radioactive for "millions of years".
  Her investigation brings her into debate with nuclear analysts, economists, the government minister of minerals and energy, a nuclear activist, and the owner/manager of South Africa’s first wind farm.  It takes place over a period of 8 years, across South Africa as she investigates the impact of nuclear power, and searches for alternatives.
  Over this time, Helena becomes a mother of two girls. This becomes further motivation to question reasoning behind the energy choices being taken now by decision makers, as they will determine what kind of earth her children will inherit. 
  This film aims to look at the nuclear issue as holistically as possible, and sheds light on the severity of the predicament facing decision makers: energy generation versus the environment.   Alternative solutions are blowing in the wind, but can we access them?  Who pays the ultimate price for our convenient electricity?   Who holds the power and can a critical mass shift the paradigm? 

 Buried in Earthskin subtly demonstrates how energy and political power go hand in hand, and gives a voice to marginalized indigenous peoples who have paid the ultimate price for decisions made (about where we get our electric power) for the sake of political and financial

Directed, Scripted, Produced and Presented by Helena Kingwill

Camera and Sound:  Jan Horn, Daniel van Heerden, Jane Kennedy, Cathy Winter, Paula Kingwill, Helena Kingwill, James Cloete, Riyaaz Dalvie.

Editors: Tamsyn Reynolds and Jacqueline van Meygaarden

Original soundtrack composed by: Jamie Jupiter
And produced by: Brian de Goede- Konshus Pilot Media

Additional Music by: Colorfields, Sven Goldin , Gene Kierman, David van Rensberg and Simon van Gend.