Friday May 7
7:30 PM Terra Madre
Saturday May 8
12:00 PM You Cannot Start Without Me
12:00 PM Mine
2:00 PM American Radical
2:00 PM Bananas!*
4:00 PM Cooking History
4:30 PM CBQM
6:30 PM P-Star Rising
6:30 PM The Topp Twins: Untouchable Girls
8:30 PM Dreamland
8:30 PM Crude Sacrifice
Sunday May 9
12:00 PM Mighty Uke
12:00 PM No Man's Land: Rabbit à la Berlin / Wild Horses of the Canadian Rockies
2:00 PM My Asian Heart
2:00 PM Monica & David
3:30 PM 1929
4:00 PM Beauty Refugee
6:30 PM Enemies of the People
6:30 PM The Experimental Eskimos
9:00 PM Music from the Moon
9:00 PM The Rainbow Warriors of Waiheke Island
Monday May 10
1:00 PM The Healing Lens
3:00 PM Shelter in Place
6:30 PM BAS! Beyond the Red Light
7:00 PM Buffy Sainte-Marie: A Multimedia Life
9:00 PM No Fun City
9:00 PM Male Domination
Tuesday May 11
1:00 PM Six Miles Deep
3:30 PM Suddenly Sami
6:30 PM Cameroon: Coming Out
of the Nkuta
6:30 PM The Erectionman
8:00 PM Orgasm Inc
8:30 PM Pax Americana and the Weaponization of Space
Wednesday May 12
1:00 PM A Sea Change
3:30 PM Art in Action
6:30 PM Chemo
6:30 PM Journey's End
8:30 PM Nemesis
9:00 PM The Children of the Commune
Thursday May 13
1:00 PM Ghosts
3:00 PM Thomas Riedelsheimer in Conversation
6:00 PM The Referees
7:00 PM Fleeting Memory
8:00 PM Bloodied But Unbowed
9:00 PM Eyes Wide Open - A Journey Through Today's South America
Friday May 14
2:00 PM Sin by Silence
4:30 PM When the Mountain Meets its Shadow
6:30 PM The Sari Soldiers
6:30 PM The Mirror
8:30 PM Disco and Atomic War
9:00 PM A Mountain Musical
Saturday May 15
12:00 PM Africa Rising
12:30 PM Small Wonders
1:30 PM Reclaiming Rights
2:00 PM Motherland
4:00 PM Anatomy: Muscle, Skin, Heart
4:30 PM Osadné
7:30 PM Saint Misbehavin': The Wavy Gravy Movie
Sunday May 16
12:00 PM Orgasm Inc
12:00 PM Crude Sacrifice
2:00 PM Bloodied But Unbowed
2:00 PM The Experimental Eskimos
4:00 PM No Fun City
4:00 PM BAS! Beyond the Red Light

 

 

Spotlight on France / Canadian Features

Pax Americana and the Weaponization of Space
Denis Delestrac, France / Canada, 2009, 85 minutes

Tuesday, May 11 | 8:30pm | Vancity Theatre

As if there weren’t enough weapons here on earth, space has become the newest arena for countries around the globe to launch their struggle for supremacy. Denis Delestrac’s film Pax Americana and the Weaponization of Space is packed full of some truly startling facts — everything from the “Rods of God” (space weapons that can launch from orbit) to the fact that fifty cents of every American tax dollar goes towards military spending. The astronomical costs of arming and policing the heavens (more than $200 billion) has largely fallen to the US Air Force, but with China and other nations challenging American supremacy, there is the potential for a war to take place right over our heads.

Comparison of the space race to the sea battles of the 18th and 19th Century are apt, since so many global interests are at stake. As per usual, economics are at the heart of the struggle. Noam Chomsky draws analogies between the US weaponization of space to good old-fashioned colonialism in the tradition of empire. In the name of protecting commercial investment, the US has charged itself with being the arbiter of peace in space. But with the weapons industry replacing almost all other manufacturing in America, is this simply a ruse? Many experts unequivocally state that missile defense is the longest running fraud in the history of US defense. That it, in fact, disguises true American intentions to dominate space as a means of dominating the entire globe. (Getting rid of the anti-ballistic missile treaty was one of the first activities undertaken by the Bush Administration.)

If a space war were to happen, the effects could prove catastrophic. Since there is no way to clean up debris and space junk, it stays in orbit, circling the globe at some 14,000 miles per hour. At this speed, even a pea-sized piece of debris has the capacity to destroy whatever is in its path. This includes satellites that regulate most of the world’s information systems (everything from GPS to banking to media). But with China shooting down one of their own aging satellites, the race shows every sign of heating up. This time, the sky may indeed be falling.

Director’s biography
Born in France (1968), Denis Delestrac graduated from the Toulouse Law University and the National School of Broadcast Journalism before leaving for the US with a one way ticket in his pocket. It was in New York where he was struck by the “countless pictorial opportunities” that he bought his first camera. As a scriptwriter and filmmaker, he has made and collaborated in several documentaries for many TV stations, audiovisual companies and cultural Institutions. He was assistant director on Mystery of the Nile, released world wide in 2005. Delestrac also created the TV version, a 50 minute film titled Adventure on the Nile.

» Website


Screening Partner

The Simons Foundation


Community Partner

Hello Cool World


Spotlight on France presented by

French Consulate


Canadian Features Presented by

documentary

 

 

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Presenting Partner
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