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Queen of the Mountain

 

        

 

 

This film chronicles the story of Theresa Goell–a woman who ignored the dictates of her family, her time and her body (she was deaf), opting for adventure and challenge in a man's field: Archaeology. In so doing, she achieved her life-long dream at the age of 50: Leading the excavation of Nemrud Dagh, a burial site in southeastern Turkey and the final resting place of King Antiochus of Commagene, who controlled Euphrates River-crossings in the century before Christ.

 

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Length: 56 min.
Country: USA
Language: English
Producer: Martha Goell Lubell
Producer Web site: http://www.wmm.com/Catalog/pages/c675.htm
Distributor:
Women Make Movies
Distributor Web site: http://www.wmm.org

Qudad: Re-inventing a Tradition

 

 

        

 

 

In 1983, Yemeni and Dutch governments collaborated to restore and preserve a 16th Century mosque in the town of Rada, Yemen, called the "Amiriya Madrasa." Covering the original structure was a type of ancient lime waterproofing plaster, called "qudad." Difficult to apply properly and taking over a year to cure, qudad was used for millennia before the secrets of its manufacture and use were nearly lost. In this film, the ancient knowledge of qudad is reborn in the restoration of Amiriya Madrasa.

 

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Length: 58 min.
Country: USA
Language: English
Producer: Caterina Borelli
Producer Web site: http://www.der.org
Distributor:
Documentary Educational Resources
Distributor Web site: http://www.der.org


Awards/Selections:

Third International Conference on Archaeology and Conservation, Jordan, 2004
Northeastern Anthropological Association Ethnographic Film and Video Festival, Lake Placid, NY, 2005
10th RAI International Festival of Ethnographic Film, London, 2005

King Solomon's Tablet of Stone

 

           

 

 

Does an ancient-looking stone tablet that appeared mysteriously in Israel reveal the actual existence of the legendary Temple of Solomon? Could a recently-discovered stone ossuary constitute evidence of the real Jesus Christ? In this film, scholars seek to resolve these and other inter-linked biblical mysteries, including one that could have shattering consequences around the world.

 

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Length: 50 min.
Country: UK
Language: English
Producer: Lara Acaster
Producer Web site: http://www.bbc.co.uk/horizon
Distributor:
BBC
Distributor Web site: http://www.bbc.co.uk/horizon

The Kingdom of the Nabateans: From Petra to Medain Saleh

 

      

 

 

 

Over 2000 years ago, camel caravans, laden with incense and spices for Mediterranian ports, set out from Medain Saleh in the Hedjaz plain of Saudi Arabia, bound for the ancient capitol of Petra. These caravan traders–the "Nabateans"–carved huge tombs high in the rocky peaks of their land. Understanding their way of life, and divining the meaning and significance of their astonishing tombs, is the subject of recent archaeological work examined in this film.

 

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Length: 52 min.
Country: France
Language: English
Producer: Gedeon Programmes -- Valerie Grenon
Producer Web site: http://www.gedeonprogrammes.com
Distributor:
Terranoa
Distributor Web site: http://www.terranoa.com

Journey into the Great Unknown

 

 

    

 

 

Modern-day explorers retrace the wild-water route of the Green and Colorado Rivers, first explored in 1869 and 1871 by the expeditions of John Wesley Powell. Powell's own journal entries, and photos from the 1871 expedition, invite scenic comparison with today's landscape, revealing a century of changes in the Grand Canyon environment.

 

 

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Length: 80 min.
Country: USA
Language: English
Producer: Gray Warriner
Producer Web site:
Distributor:
Camera One
Distributor Web site: http://www.cameraone.us

 

 

Awards/Selections:

The film was just completed, and has never been entered in a film festival.

In the Land of the Black Pharoahs

 

        

 

 

The film chronicles the work of one of Europe's leading archaeologists–Swiss-born Charles Bonnet–as he and his team comb the sands of Northern Sudan. Their work reveals the former existence of a great Nubian civilization and its imperial capital, Kerma–ancient home of the "Black Pharaohs."

 

 

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Length: 52 min.
Country: Switzerland
Language: French/English Subtitles
Producer: Climage
Producer Web site: http://www.climage.ch
Distributor:
Climage
Distributor Web site: http://www.climage.ch


 

 

Awards/Selections:

Vision du Reel Documentary Festival, Nyon, Switzerland

Gone to Pat

 

 

        

 

  

The film draws us into the living art of the Patuas–a nomadic people of the small village of Noya, India. Their art, called "Pat," is produced from natural pigments painted on scrolls, then presented with accompanying musical narratives. The richly-colored "Pats" depict the ancient myths of the Patuas' Indian culture. Neither Muslim nor Hindu, the Patua are more clearly defined through their art, now also sold to tourists. Artistic subjects and styles change through time as the creative process is passed on from one generation to the next.

 

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Length: 30 min.
Country: India
Language: English
Producer: Adirya Kashyap
Producer Web site: http://www.der.org
Distributor:
Documentary Educational Resources
Distributor Web site: http://www.der.org

 

 

Awards/Selections:

Heard Museum Film Festival, Arizona, 2005
10th RAI International Film Festival of Ethnographic Film, London, 2005

From the Inside Out

 

 

  

 

"From the Inside Out" portrays the 1970s renaissance of Navaho Indian basketry led by a group of families in the Douglas Mesa region of Utah. The film examines the transition of basket-making as it was historically elevated from practical craft to sacred ceremonial status. At its spiritual zenith, basket-making serves what the Navajo refer to as "Hozho"–bringing beauty, balance, order, and harmony to their lives.

 

 

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 Length: 27 min.
Country: USA
Language: English
Producer: April Chabries
Producer Web site: http://www.der.org
Distributor:
Documentary Educational Resources (DER)
Distributor Web site: http://www.der.org


Awards/Selections:

Durango Film Festival, Colorado, 2005
First Place, Educational Films, Broadcast Education Association Faculty Contest, 2005
Contemporary Native America Screening, Lesley University, Cambridge, MA, 2005

Following Antigone: Forensic Anthropology and Human Rights Investigations

 

     

 

 

This film offers insight into the application of forensic sciences in the investigation of international human rights abuses. The Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team (EAAF), an international NGO, took footage of forensic investigations they carried out in Argentina, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Haiti, and East Timor from over the past 18 years. Sequences of exhumations and reburials document the heavy emotional toll being taken upon survivors and their families.

 

 

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 Length: 37 min.
Country: Argentina/USA
Language: English
Producer: Witness and EAAF
Producer Web site: http://www.eaaf.org
Distributor:
Witness
Distributor Web site: http://www.witness.org

 


Awards/Selections:

Latin American Students Association (LASA) Film Festival, Las Vegas, 2004

The Disappearing of Tuvalu: Trouble in Paradise

 

     

 

The film documents the earth's first sovereign nation faced with total destruction from the effects of global warming–the 20-square mile South Pacific island chain of Tuvalu. Observation, narration and citizen interviews paint a full portrait of an isolated human community facing gradual inundation on the front lines of a global environmental calamity.

 

 

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Length: 75 min.
Country: USA/France
Language: English
Producer: Gilliane Le Gallic
Producer Web site: http://www.der.org
Distributor:
Documentary Educational Resources
Distributor Web site: http://www.der.org





Awards/Selections:

Planete broadcast, Documentary Channel, France, 2004
Ecology and Sustainable Development Documentary Film Festival, Paris, 2004
First Place, Sustainable Development Category, ECOFILM, International Environmental & Sustainable Film Festival, Roubaix, France, 2004
22nd International Environmental Film Festival, Paris, 2004
Second Place, Pollution and Global Warming, Earthvision Environmental Film Festival, Santa Cruz, CA, 2004
2nd International Film Festival of Oceania, Tahiti, 2005 Hearts and Minds Film Festival, Delaware, 2005
Northeastern Anthropological Association Ethnographic Film and Video Festival, Lake Placid, NY, 2005
ECOCINEMA, Greece, 2005
2nd Green Film Festival, Seoul, Korea, 2005
SCINEMA, Festival of Science, Australia, 2005
Plymouth Independent Film Festival, Toronto, Canada, 2005
Planet in Focus Environmental Film Festival, Toronto, Canada, 2005

Blood of the Vikings: Invasion



         

 

 

In this two-part series, Julian Richards examines the story of the Vikings in Britain, from their first raids, to the settlement of the British Isles. The Viking legacy is traced through archaeology, history and a genetics survey of Britain's current inhabitants. Episode 2 examines evidence for a large-scale invasion by Vikings from Denmark.

 

 

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Length: 50 min.
Country: UK
Language: English
Producer: Paul Bradshaw
Producer Web site:
Distributor:
BBC Worldwide
Distributor Web site: http://www.bbcworldwide.com



Awards/Selections:

Prize for Creative Research, ICRONOS, Bordeaux, France,2004

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