레이블이 Regina인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Regina인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2013년 6월 24일 월요일

Regina Weinreich: Blackfish: Rooting for Killer Whales and Killer Kids in Lost for Life


Get Entertainment Alerts: Sign Up

It's not likely you'll want to take your kids to SeaWorld after seeing Blackfish, a riveting documentary expose starring former trainers of orca whales, taken from the wild. It is hard to get warm and fuzzy over fish that weigh a few thousand pounds each, no matter how many times they leap to the ball or roll over on command, but once you see the pups separated from their mothers, or hear the sound they make when they grieve, this movie has you by the heartstrings.

At a dinner at Circo on Wednesday night, filmmaker Gabriela Cowperthwaite explained how she got interested in this subject: a mom who took her kids to SeaWorld, she thought, this is fun for the kids, but what is wrong with this picture? And then in 2010, when a trainer was killed by one of the whales in captivity, an attack that was covered up, the victim, a seasoned and beloved trainer blamed for wearing a ponytail, she decided to investigate this world where highly evolved animals are kidnapped from their natural habitat and forced into the entertainment industry where they are penned in tight surroundings with other whales in sometimes nasty relationships.
Samantha Berg, now an acupuncturist in Alaska, is one of several former trainers in the film; after realizing the indefensible immorality of this business, she suggested a rehab process for the whales, that is, returning them to the oceans. They would never survive in their present condition transformed by drugs, and horrific experiences, but could survive gradually.

Present at the screening and dinner, a state-of-the-art Peggy Siegal event, Peter and Nejma Beard, Calvin Klein, Albert Maysles. Documentary filmmaker Kate Davis, whose documentary on the Cheshire Murders will air on HBO later this summer, pointed out that we are so willing to take a compassionate view when it comes to animals, even when they kill. We are less giving toward children of deplorable childhoods who commit heinous acts.

A debate ensued that resonates for yet another new documentary, Lost for Life, directed by Josh Rofe, and produced by Ted Leonsis, Rick Allen, Mark Jonathan Harris and Peter Landesman, about young people who committed murders as juveniles who are now serving life sentences without parole. You hear both sides, that is, about childhoods that are near Dickensian, defined by sexual and other forms of abuse. You hear from families of victims who want justice. Those interviewed behind bars seem to have transformed their lives, and you may want to consider, as the filmmakers seem to suggest, their sentences be reviewed. The film is featured at AFI this weekend, and next week's Nantucket Film Festival.

A version of this post also appears on Gossip Central.

Get Alerts

View the original article here

2013년 6월 8일 토요일

Regina Weinreich: Morton Downey Jr.'s American Tragedy


Get Entertainment Alerts: Sign Up

In his time, the late '80's, Morton Downy, Jr. was the hottest voice on television, loud and abrasive. For nearly two years, he brow beat and brawled his way to top ratings, ultimately alienating top tier guests, until his talk show devolved into something of a circus act, showcasing strippers and carnies, a precursor to Jerry Springer, and the in your face television of today. At the Paley Center on Wednesday night, television and media personalities: Donny Deutsch, Rosanna Scotto, Dick Cavett, Joe Conason, Dan Abrams, Peggy Siegal and others gathered for a screening of documentary Evocateur: Morton Downey Jr. As much as everyone knew about this chain smoking loud mouth, the documentary still held many surprises, including his anxiety of influence over his famous dad.

Filmmakers Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, Jeremy Newburger, were kids fascinated by all this tumult, particularly the Tawana Brawley case which Downy got behind, along with a heavy and slick Reverend Al Sharpton who took a few punches himself. Not only was Morton Downy Jr. a champion of the Tawana Brawley case, but he staged his own hoax in an airport men's room claiming skinheads attacked him, chopped his hair and designed swastikas with black sharpies on him. The filmmakers said they knew they had to include that moment. American civil rights attorney Gloria Allred had a sympathetic view of Downy. At the Paley Center reception, she noted how hard it is to be successful in television. Shouldn't he have learned from the Tawana Brawley drama? Ultimately the truth would come out? Downy's story is particularly sad, his speedy downfall, his hybris, his tragic inability to stop even the smoking by which he would die of lung cancer in 2001.

A version of this post also appears on Gossip Central.

Get Alerts

View the original article here