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SEDONA GREEN

 

We have exciting films, programs and discussions planned for Sedona Green: Sustainability Programs at the Sedona International Film Festival.


Click Here to Visit our Sedona Green Blog


This year we are "greening" the festival and we are excited to introduce a "SUSTAINABLE" film series that will be part of the festival lineup in addition to workshops, seminars and special Sedona Green events. Just look for the Sustainable Film Series/Sedona Green logo in the festival program which will denote these films and special events.


In addition to terrific films on sustainability ... Our team has worked to be a “greener” festival with water stations to refill water bottles and clearly accessible recycling bins for attendees. We will keep pressing further on assuring the SIFF operates as "greenly" as possible!


Sedona Green Honoree

Neal Rogin, Filmmaker

Neal Rogin is a multi-award winning writer and filmmaker whose work has reached millions of people around the world. Throughout his career he has demonstrated a unique ability to conceive and communicate ideas that change the way they think and move people to action. 

 

He is Communications Director for The Pachamama Alliance, a nonprofit partnership between people from the modern world and indigenous people in the Amazon region of Ecuador, and is a principle part of the development team that has created the half day Awakening the Dreamer Symposium, the purpose of which is to bring forth an environmentally sustainable, spiritually fulfilling and socially just human presence on this planet.  Tens of thousands from over 40 countries (translated into 6 languages) have participated in this powerful interactive mulitimedia experience of which is embedded with his cinamagraphic and scripting skill.

 

Neal wrote, directed and produced a documentary film for the Alliance entitled "The Eagle and the Condor" which highlights the importance of merging ancient indigenous wisdom with our modern technological worldview. His latest film, "The Awakening Universe", based upon the book, The Universe Story by Brian Swimme and Thomas Berry, explores how the New Cosmology is changing the very definition of what it means to be a person. He scripted a film for rock legend Sting and his Rainforest Foundation. The film, entitled "Burning Down Tomorrow," was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Documentary Short Subject.

 

He received a National Emmy Award for Outstanding Achievement in Writing for "Spaceship Earth," a half-hour television special that aired on the Disney Channel.

 

Mr. Rogin also played a major role in the landmark "LIVE AID Concert for African Famine Relief," as head writer and associate producer of the 16-hour global radio broadcast, and as creator of the program's key televised promotional theme, "Ending Hunger: Now that we can, we must." LIVE AID, which reached more than 1.5 billion people in 160 countries around the world, was the largest broadcast event in history.

Mr. Rogin currently is Vice President and Creative Director for One Degree Media and Entertainment, and a member of the Turning Tide Coalition, as well as the Transformational Leadership Council.

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Monday, Feb. 22

Sedona Green Kick-Off 

FREE Event following “Terra Madre”

Pachamama Alliance

Presentation — with Neal Rogin and Mark Dubois

7:30 p.m. at Harkins Theatre 1

followed by a Locavore Reception at Sedona Rouge

Mark Dubois is a charismatic and energetic idea generator and tireless campaigner for the world's rivers. He is a co-founder and board member emeritus of Friends of the River, California's statewide organization working for the protection of rivers, their flora and fauna and for sustainable water development. Mark also co-founded International Rivers Network.

Mark served as International Coordinator for Earth Day 1990 and Earth Day 2000.

He is currently the Alliances Coordinator for the Pachamama Alliance and a tireless advocate for building sustainable communities.

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Tuesday, Feb. 23 and

Wednesday, Feb. 24 

FREE WORKSHOP with Morrie Warshawski

Transformative Fundraising for Filmmakers

9 a.m. - Noon

At Zaki Gordon Institute for Independent Filmmaking

• Fundraising from A to Z

• Investor Models for Film Financing

• Non-Profit Models for Film Financing

• Engaging donors & investors from pre-production through distribution

Morrie Warshawski works with nonprofits and filmmakers that are having difficulty realizing their full potential.  He helps them create roadmaps to a better future through strategic planning.  His work is characterized by a commitment to the core values of tolerance, thoughtfulness, transparency, and creativity. 

Warshawski has worked in the field for over thirty years as an administrator, consultant, facilitator, teacher and writer.  He was the Executive Director of two media arts centers (Bay Area Video Coalition and The Media Project).  He has served on numerous grant panels, and consulted with dozens of independent filmmakers. 

Warshawski is the author of two books on fundraising, Shaking The Money Tree: The Art of Getting Grants And Donations For Film And Video, and The Fundraising Houseparty: How to Party With a Purpose and Raise Money for Your Cause.

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Thursday, Feb. 25  

FREE WORKSHOP with

George Rush and Lise Swenson

The Business of Getting Your Film Out There: Distribution

9 a.m. - Noon

At Zaki Gordon Institute for Independent Filmmaking

George M. Rush is an attorney and sales rep specializing in the entertainment industry with emphasis on the San Francisco Bay Area film community. Clients include producers, directors, screen-writers and investors in development, production and distribution phases.  George recently repped Frazer Bradshaw's Everything Strange and New, Barry Jenkin's Medicine for Melancholy and Geralyn Pezanoski's Mine.

Lise Swenson has been an active member in the media arts of the Bay Area since the early 1980s. As a filmmaker she creates documentaries, experimental documentaries, feature length fiction and short experimental video art works. Swenson also creates multi-monitor video art works and video installations built in response to specific sites. She was a first assistant director on ‘Strange Culture’ and a producer of ‘Mission Movie’ both films garnered many festival awards nationwide.

Today Swenson is working on her latest feature film, "Saltwater" as well as the documentary ‘An Unexamined Life’.  She is a popular instructor of film and video internationally.

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Friday, Feb. 26 and

Saturday, Feb. 27 

FREE WORKSHOP with Debbie Brubaker

Producing Your Film: What You Need to Know

9 a.m. - Noon

At Zaki Gordon Institute for Independent Filmmaking

This is a two-part workshop. The first part is dedicated to development and pre-production planning. We will discuss scheduling, budgeting, business plans and casting,  legal issues and much more.  The second part will focus on the transition between development and pre-production to production, post, and distribution.  We will discuss bonds, post production, clearances, product placement, music, festivals and distribution – currently a hot topic in the film industry.

Debbie Brubaker is a seasoned producer in the world of  “indie” feature films and ‘godmother’ of the San Francisco Bay Area independent movie arena. One of her recent successes was co-producing  Peter Bratt’s movie La Mission, a Sundance 2009 hit.

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Friday, Feb. 26  

FREE PANEL DISCUSSION

with FESTIVAL FILM PRODUCERS

PRODUCING YOUR FILM

2 p.m. to 4 p.m.

At Zaki Gordon Institute for Independent Filmmaking

Join panel moderators Stephan Schultze and Bryan Reinhart and special guest Kathleen Glynn (who produces all of Michael Moore’s films).

They will be joined by other invited producers of festival films for an eye-opening, open discussion about producing.

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Friday, Feb. 26  

FREE ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION moderated by John D’Anna

Sustainability Roundtable:

Challenges & Solutions for Arizona

5:00 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

At Studio Live Theatre

A panel of sustainability experts will explore critical issues for Arizona and the world. This thought-provoking discussion will be moderated by John D’Anna.



John D’Anna
is editor of the Mesa Republic community edition and the author of the azgreenday environmental blog.  Before his current assignment, he has served as deputy managing editor, senior editor for metro, projects editor, deputy city editor and assistant city editor. He was named one of Gannett Company's top 16 newsroom supervisors nationwide in 2003.

From 1997 to 2002, he oversaw newsroom legal issues for the Republic, including a successful mandamus action before 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals involving the criminal trial of Gov. Fife Symington and a successful public records access suit against state Education Department over the release of standardized test questions. Both efforts were honored with freedom of information awards from the Society of Professional Journalists and the Arizona Newspapers Association.




Don Piper
teaches the capstone course for the “Sustainable MBA” at Bainbridge Graduate Institute, Sustainable Intrapreneurship and Entrepreneurship and is a Mentor-in-Residence at the Arizona Center for Innovation.  Previously, Don was a Mentor-in-Residence at the McGuire Entrepreneurship Program, Eller College of Management, University of Arizona, in Tucson, Arizona. 

In 2007, Don was recognized by Fortune Small Business and CNN/Money as “top in the field by colleagues, students, and entrepreneurs.” Prior to entering academia in 2004, he was Chairman of the Board of ntouchresearch Corporation; a founding member of two venture capital funds, TriState Investment Group II and IV; and Chairman of the Board of The Phoenix, a research management company.

Don’s specialty is in helping individuals and organizations interested in solving social and environmental problems create fourth bottom line solutions incorporating spirit, culture, and purpose into economically sustainable ventures.

 

John Neville
, president and founding board member of Sustainable Arizona, has been involved creatively in sustainable development and communications for more than 30 years.  He has helped organizations with sustainability systems, business communications and management practices, leadership development, and diversity enhancement. John has conducted corporatewide sustainability performance assessments and strategic environmental information planning, produced EHS programs

for compliance and beyond compliance training, and more. Currently, John is USGBC LEED-AP and provides sustainable systems consulting and communications services to municipalities and businesses and is a frequent guest speaker.

 

 

 

Terril L. Shorb is a life-long westerner who grew up on ranches, subsistence farms, and in small rural towns in the northern Rockies. He holds a Ph.D. in Sustainability Education, an M.A. in Interdisciplinary Studies, and a B.A. in Communication Studies. He is on the Faculty of Prescott College’s Adult Degree and Graduate Program where he founded the undergraduate degree program in Sustainable Community Development, the first of its kind in the nation.

His writing and photography appears in books, newspapers and magazines including Thoreau’s Legacy: American Stories about Global Warming, High Country News, America West Airlines Magazine, The Denver Post, Persimmon Hill, Succeed: The Magazine for Continuing Education, and Birds and Blooms.

He is co-founder of Native West Press, a non-profit natural history press that produces educational books on wildlife of the American West.


Mara DeFilippis
is the founder of the Arizona Green Chamber of Commerce.  She was appointed Chief Executive Officer of organization in 2008.  The Arizona Green Chamber is the reflection of her vision to promote the success of businesses committed to environmental and social responsibility.

Prior to founding the Green Chamber, she was a licensed certified public accountant.  Ms. DeFilippis spent several years with Merrill Lynch and a local boutique securities broker as a licensed financial advisor.  During her career in the securities industry, she focused on identifying socially and environmentally responsible companies for clients of those firms who had a commitment to socially responsible investments. 

It is her belief that there the current economic structure has tremendous capacity and opportunity for growth and success with a more responsible and long-sighted approach.  She has a long record of championing environmental, children’s and women’s causes.


Greg Peterson,
received his Masters degree in Environmental Planning and his Bachelors degree in Interdisciplinary Studies at ASU. Both degrees were grounded in sustainability studies merging over 25 years of real world self study with academic planning. As a resident of Phoenix for the last 40 years, Greg has a long rich history of urban sustainability and food production in dry lands. Throughout his life the notion of sustainability played a key role in the way he pursued his education and planted his gardens. In 1991 the concept of permaculture was introduced and brought together many sustainability concepts into one cohesive system.

In 2001 out of his undergraduate work at ASU, Greg created a new concept called the Urban Farm, a real world environmental showcase home in the heart of Phoenix, Arizona. Utilizing his extensive background to develop an innovative holistic home site, The Urban Farm features an entirely edible 1/3 acre farm/yard, rainwater and greywater harvesting, solar applications along with extensive use of reclaimed and recycled building materials.   

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Saturday, Feb. 27  

FREE ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION moderated by Neal Rogin

Sustainability Roundtable:

Filmmakers, Artists and Social Change

2:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

At Studio Live Theatre

Join actors, filmmakers, directors, producers and members of the Creative Coalition for a lively discussion about the filmmaker’s and artists’ roles in social change and activism.

Take part in a one-on-one interaction with panelists and celebrity guests as they look at this timely and important topic — for us and for our environment!





Click Here to Visit our Sedona Green Blog






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