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This
week's featured review & film archive
Sarah Jaffe reviews
independent and foreign films,
in addition to reporting the latest buzz behind
Colorado's film festivals.
The Revolution Will Not
Be Televised (2002, Kim Bartley & Donnacha
O Brian)
In April 2002, the democratically elected President
of Venezuela, the world's fourth largest exported
of oil, was removed from office for approximately
4 days. Hugo Chavez had promised to redistribute
the country's oil wealth among the 80% of the
population that lived in poverty. The 20% who
had previously reaped the rewards from the oil
industry didn't like that, and neither did the
U.S. government, who still deny any involvement
in the coup.
Irish filmmakers Kim Bartley and Donnacha O Brian
were in the process of filming a documentary on
Chavez when the coup took place. The Revolution
Will Not Be Televised is a unique look at what
the world didn't see, and makes you question what
your country really tells you. Or at least, it
should.
Bartley and O Brian are obviously pro-Chavez,
and any documentary is obviously going to skew
towards a certain point of view, but the most
interesting part of this film is not what Chavez
has to say or the shots of him talking to the
citizens (in fact, I think that if the coup had
not happened, this would've been one dull documentary!),
but what happens in the streets before, during,
and after the provisional government took power
and dissolved such institutions as the Supreme
Court.
That the coup only lasted four days is a testament
to the people of Venezuela, who in the face of
international support for millionaire Pedro Carmona,
swarmed the palace and refused to accept the coup.
Bartley and O Brian managed to capture all of
this on film, as well as the triumphant return
of Chavez. This film, though certainly not objective,
should be seen anyway by anyone who doubts the
power of the people, or anyone who believes in
it.
www.starzfilmcenter.com
This may be a few weeks late,
but what the hell, here’s what I see as
some of the best movies and music released this
past year - SJ
Top Ten Movies of 2003
1. Bubba-Ho-Tep
2. Lost In Translation
3. Bend It Like Beckham
4. Wonderland
5. Mystic River
6. The Station Agent
7. Thirteen
8. Kill Bill vol. 1
9. Pirates of the Caribbean
10. Whale Rider
(and you know what makes me happy? 4 out of the
10 were written and directed by women!)
And Top Ten Albums:
1. OutKast: Speakerboxx/The Love Below
2. Rancid: Indestructible
3. Pink: Try This
4. White Stripes: Elephant
5. Yeah Yeah Yeahs: Fever to Tell
6. Nick Cave: Nocturama
7. Anti-Flag: The Terror State
8. Distillers: Coral Fang
9. Dropkick Murphys: Blackout
10. Roger Miret & the Disasters: self-titled.
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