Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. MARK KITCHELL is a veteran documentary filmmaker, known for social histories of social change movements: . · Berkeley in the Sixties, Academy Award nominee and winner of top honors, has become a well-loved classic, one of the defining films about the protest movements that shook America during the 1960s. .

    • About Mark

      Whether it’s fate or fortune, Mark has made a series of...

  2. Whether it’s fate or fortune, Mark has made a series of social histories of social change movements. Now in the works is a film about the cannabis movement. The Emerald Triangle tells the story of the world’s favorite illegal drug, how it became legal, and its impact on our culture.

  3. 484 views2 years ago. The Films of Mark Kitchell are about social change movements.Berkeley in the Sixties (newly restored) was nominated for an Academy Award, won top honors and ...

  4. Directed and written by Mark Kitchell, Academy Award-nominated director of Berkeley in the Sixties, and narrated by Robert Redford, Ashley Judd, Van Jones, Isabel Allende and Meryl Streep, the film premiered at Sundance Film Festival 2012, has won acclaim at festivals around the world, and in 2013 begins theatrical release as well as educational...

  5. 4 de mar. de 1991 · Berkeley in the Sixties: Directed by Mark Kitchell. With Jentri Anders, Joan Baez, Frank Bardacke, Stokely Carmichael. A documentary about militant student political activity in the University of California-Berkely in the 1960's.

  6. iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/movie/a-fierce-green-fire-the-battle-for-a-living-planet/id1549660777?ls=1. A Fierce Green Fire is a big-picture exploration of the environmental movement, grassroots and global activism spanning five decades from conservation to climate change.

  7. The film highlights the origins of the Free Speech Movement beginning with the May 1960 House Un-American Activities Committee hearings at San Francisco City Hall, [3] the development of the counterculture of the 1960s in Berkeley, California, and ending with People's Park in 1969. [4] The film features 15 student activists and archival footage ...