DIRECTOR
PULLS DOCUMENTARY FROM ARTIVIST FILM FEST
OVER CONTROVERSIAL OIL COMPANY SPONSORSHIP;
CELEBRITIES, NGOS SUPPORT PULL OUT
World Premiere Of ‘Justicia Now’
Saturday November 10th Moves to Raleigh
Studios
Appearances by DARYL HANNAH, STUART
TOWNSEND: Introduction by Q'ORIANKA
KILCHER
Interviews Available: Directors Martin
O’Brien & Robbie Proctor, Daryl Hannah
and Q’Orianka Kilcher
Los Angeles, California
– Celebrity activists Q’Orianka Kilcher
and Daryl Hannah and other industry
luminaries will team up this Saturday at
Raleigh Studios in Hollywood for the
world premiere of a new short film
‘Justicia Now’.
The film (30 min.) was
originally slated to premiere at the Artivist Film Festival but Director
Martin O’Brien pulled out after the
festival’s announcement late last week
of a new relationship with Petrobras,
Brazil’s state-owned oil company with a
controversial record of drilling in
pristine areas of the Amazon rainforest,
including on the territories of
uncontacted indigenous peoples.
‘Justicia Now’ is a documentary about
ChevronTexaco's toxic legacy in the
Northern Ecuadorian region of the Amazon
rainforest - and a courageous group of
people called Los Afectados (The
Affected Ones) who are seeking justice
for the ensuing cancer, sickness and
death in the largest environmental class
action lawsuit in history.
The Artivist Film Festival announced
their selection of Petrobras as a
‘presenting sponsor’ last week, just
days after indigenous leaders held a
protest outside the Petrobras offices in
the Ecuadorian capitol of Quito to
protest the oil giant’s plans to drill
in Yasuni National Park, a UNESCO
Biosphere Reserve and thought to be the
Amazon’s most biodiverse park,and home
to uncontacted indigenous peoples.
Petrobras also faces allegations of
slave labor at another of its petroleum
projects.
Despite O’Brien’s appeal to Artivist
Board Members and staff to return all
funds from Petrobras and formally
announce the severing of ties with the
company, Artivist management chose to
retain a substantial advertising
contribution from the company, despite
their commitment to drop the company’s
Presenting Sponsorship status (a claim
they have yet to make public).
Celebrities such as Daryl Hannah and
Q’Orianka Kilcher, and international
NGOs such as Amazon Watch pulled their
support for the Artivist Film Festival
and are supporting the independent
screening event of ‘Justicia Now’ at its
alternate venue, the Raleigh Studios in
Hollywood on Saturday, November 10th at
6:30pm.
The
screening is free, however donations
will be welcomed.
O’Brien and others also asked Artivist
for a commitment to create environmental
and social justice guidelines to screen
future potential funders to ensure that
the festival’s practice lives up to its
stated mission and honor the spirit of
the filmmakers it claims to support.
O’Brien won the ‘Environmental
Preservation’ award at last year’s
Artivist Film Festival for his
documentary ‘Freedom Fuels’ and was
previously an enthusiastic supporter of
the Festival.
“We are sad to see that the young
Artivist Film Festival is falling for
the corporate greenwashing of Petrobras
by refusing to omit this oil company
from their program. This is allowing the
company to exploit the moral standing of
the film festival and the environmental
community they represent,” O’ Brien
said.
Daryl Hannah, Q’Orianka Kilcher and
Actor/Director Stuart Townsend are
interviewed in ‘Justicia Now’ and will
be available for media interviews before
the screening and panel discussion with
the film’s directors and representatives
from Amazon Watch.
Of her experience witnessing
ChevronTexaco’s legacy in Ecuador,
Hannah said: “Everything the
communities live on or off is poisoned.
There are epidemics of cancer, every
type of cancer in children, babies,
women and men. It's heartbreaking and
it's reprehensible."
“I was there. I witnessed the Big Oil
crimes these multinational oil companies
are committing on human life and the
environment! Seeing is believing and in
this day of media and technology, it is
our responsibility to shed light on
these Issues through our work. ‘Justicia
Now’ is doing just that!” said Q’Orianka
Kilcher, actress and Amazon Watch Youth
Ambassador.
O’Brien’s commitment to
advocacy filmmaking has inspired him to
utilize cutting edge film distribution
techniques, and ‘Justicia Now’ will be
available for rapid dissemination via a
FREE download which will commence at
11:11AM on November 11th from the
website at www.JusticiaNow.org.
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