Cinematographer Steve

February 21st, 2010

From the clear crystal breath and blue grey ghosts of Fort Chip
to the missing of my lover and good shit from liz’s brother.
cult saleswomen in Nelson and caves of the east coast
to treading water in waves of washington politicians
who preach shark hunting in cages for non swimmers.
lost with liz and lorena in beef country frickin back focus, back flip i never did.
fish and chips and THE SWAN from heavenly fable
set the table with greasy spoonfed practical interview squabble
Price my main man was gettin wet in the boots
and goin Cousteau on my ass and black and white were the fruits.
Shoot the deer!
Chopin’s nocturnes and U turns were a blessing.
messy left turns at dead ends and Quinn to set it all straight
stop on the shoulder and put the visor down
drowned poles made lorena laugh and hoping for misty waterholes
came with a sci-fi soundtrack
bomb the tarsands and loot the place
black gold is the robber and Maude is the mace.

Reflections by Maude Barlow

February 15th, 2010

Welcome to Water On The Table, a new documentary by Toronto-based filmmaker Liz Marshall.

I met Liz several years ago when my first book on water, Blue Gold, was published and it set Liz on a journey to chronicle the fight for water justice as well as to tell the story of the need to take better care of Canada’s water heritage. Liz is a passionate artist with a strong commitment to environmental justice. This documentary is a tribute to her tenacity – as funding for projects such as this is harder and harder to come by. I have been honoured to be the subject of her film and to spend a great deal of time with her and her terrific team.

Liz chose to chronicle my life in a very important and interesting year (2008 – 2009) which took me from intense local struggles over water to the floor of the United Nations General Assembly. When we looked back over the year in hindsight, it was clear that Liz had captured three distinct stories, one local, one national and one international.

The local story is the fight to halt construction of a dumpsite on the pristine Alliston Aquifer up in the rolling farmlands of Simcoe County, a story of heroic local resistance by First Nations women and local farmers to save the water of this place. Liz captures what I call “raw democracy in action” and some deeply moving moments in this story.

The national story is the on-going struggle to expose the damage done to the environment and health of local residents of the tar sands of Northern Alberta – “Canada’s Mordor.” The visuals in this story are stunning and an interview with a local First Nations elder is one of the most haunting I have ever seen.

Liz was with me at the United Nations for the celebration of the 60th anniversary of the International Declaration of Human Rights and caught the humour, dignity and courage of Father Miguel d’Escoto Brockman, Nicaraguan freedom fighter, liberation theologian and 63rd President of the UN General Assembly. She shows how the fight for the right to water has moved to the heart of this institution and explains that the way the UN deals with this issue will help define its role in the coming years.

So, welcome to my world as told by a talented and committed Canadian filmmaker. I hope it inspires you to join our fight for water justice here in Canada and around the world. You can find out more about these and other struggles at our website

Warmly

Maude

PRESS RELEASE – TVO BROADCAST PREMIERE

February 10th, 2010

WATER ON THE TABLE
featuring water-warrior Maude Barlow

A poetic essay documentary by Liz Marshall

The Hour Length Broadcast Version of Water On The Table Will Premiere onTVO’s Gemini Award- Winning Documentary Strand, The View From Here, Wednesday March 24, 2010 at 10:00pm(EST)
Repeated March 25 at 1:00am(EST) & Sunday March 28th at 10:30pm(EST)
Liz Marshall and Maude Barlow are available for interviews.

http://www.wateronthetable.com/

(Toronto – February 5, 2010) Canadian crusader Maude Barlow has had to defend the life-or-death truth against corporate interests for years… And even today, it is a war un-won. At stake in her crusade is humanity’s own right to the liquid that sustains all life – balanced against powerful interests that insist water is just another resource to be bought and sold. In some countries where the corporate argument has prevailed, the poor can be barred from collecting rainwater.

Water On The Table is a character-driven, social-issue documentary by Liz Marshall that explores Canada’s relationship to its freshwater, arguably its most precious natural resource. The film asks the question: is water a commercial good like running-shoes or Coca-Cola? Or, is it a human right like air?

Water On The Table approaches this question through the eyes of Barlow – an “international water-warrior,” a lightning rod for the looming water crisis. She fought relentlessly – if in vain – to keep water off the table in the controversial North American Free Trade Agreement, and she served as the U.N. Senior Advisor on Water to the 63rd President of the General Assembly from 2008 – 2009.

“Water must be declared a public trust that belongs to the people, the ecosystem and the future, and preserved for all time and practice in law, as a human right.” Barlow says.

Water On The Table shadows Maude Barlow at the controversial tar sands in Alberta, in the halls of the United Nations, and protesting Site 41 – a local issue with global resonance – the camera follows Barlow and a cross-section of farmers, Mohawk First Nation activists, cottagers and seniors in Simcoe County, Ontario to protest dumpsite Site 41. After decades of contentiousness, the municipality of North Simcoe seemed finally set on greenlighting a privately-administered land-fill on the far-reaching Alliston Aquifer, what one water expert, University of Heidelberg Professor William Shotyk, has called “the cleanest water in the world.” Barlow’s strategic campaign resulted in Walks For Water eventually attracting up to two thousand people and a proposal for a one year moratorium on the site. The attention on the issue lit a fire under both local and provincial governments. Water On The Table tracks the arc of this monumental struggle.

But more than an activist’s diary, Water On The Table is a poetic essay that intimately captures the public face of Maude Barlow as well as the unscripted woman behind the scenes. Her day-in-the-life is woven between dramatic, artfully crafted debates with several opponents in Canada and in the U.S. who argue that the best way to protect freshwater is to privatize it, and that water-rich Canada should bulk- export its water now, in the face of an imminent U.S. water crisis.

Cinematic water compositions by Steve Cosens (The Tracey Fragments, Durham County, Nurse Fighter Boy) create a reflective mood. The camera lingers on watersheds, wetlands, rivers, estuaries, cascades and lakes, elevating water beyond the political and into the realm of our own soul as a species on Earth.

Water On The Table is an 11th-hour cinematic wake-up call, and an unforgettable profile of a woman on an unstoppable mission.

Documentary cinematic storyteller Liz Marshall has explored social justice in projects shot all over the world, including West and Central Africa, sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, Central and South America, Europe, and North America. She has focused on censorship issues for writers, war-affected children, the anti-corporate-globalization movement, gender, education, sweatshop labour,
refugees, HIV/AIDS, popular culture, music and the written and spoken word.

Maude Barlow is the National Chair of the citizen advocacy group The Council Of Canadians, the co-founder of the Blue Planet Project, a best-selling author of 16 books, the recipient of the Right Livelihood Award (the ‘Alternative Nobel’), and a holder of eight honourary Doctorates.

Water On The Table was produced in association with TVO.

Water On The Table was produced in association with Knowledge, and with the participation of the Canadian Television Fund, Ontario Arts Council, Canwest-Hot Docs Completion Fund, and Rogers Documentary Fund.

For more information, to request screeners, interviews
get GAT:
Ingrid Hamilton ingrid@gat.ca h/o: 416-482-6142 c: 416-731-3034
Vitaly Gurevich vitaly@gat.ca c: 416-888-3744

get TVO:
Paul Ginis pginis@tvo.org TVO Marketing and Communications 416-484-2600

Download pictures, www.gat.ca/media
Username: media | Password: media | click: TV | click: Water On The Table

The film is now complete!

February 1st, 2010

The feature length version of Water On The Table has been submitted to Hot docs for consideration. And, the broadcast hour will premier on TVO’s The View From Here on March 24th @ 10pm EST.

Making Water On The Table has consumed me entirely, for the last 2-3 years. I was determined to tell a story that would somehow do justice to Maude Barlow’s mission, and that would also present her critics in a three-dimensional, non-dismissive way. I wanted to cinematically express the dramatic dimensions of an ideological divide that is worsening as the world is running out of freshwater. I think the film has achieved this; captured this tension. The issues are dense, political, and nuanced – it took time to wrap my mind around them, and then craft a narrative that wasn’t for dummies or for experts. My editor (Jeremiah Munce) and I were mindful in our approach to steer away from biased manipulative tactics. Yet, it was always the intention to present Maude, the main character, in an intimate tone – to capture the unscripted woman, mother and grandmother, and the media savvy activist.

My hope for the film is that it significantly contributes to a greater conversation.

A big shout out to the A team I put together for this epic endeavor – check out “The Team” on the Water On The Table website.
Nameste.