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Wednesday
Dec032014

Thanksgiving 2014 Newsletter

As I reflect back on the last year, I am constantly reminded of the people who have been tremendous supporters of Warrior Films. Your continued interest and contributions have made a very direct impact in furthering our mission and goals. So I give thanks this week for you.  Warrior Films is about transformation – individual human transformation, transformation of families and communities, and transformation of society - and you make that possible.

We are proud of our 2014 successes.  We literally couldn’t have done them without you. Highlights include:

These successes demonstrate the power of human compassion to mobilize and catalyze change. Through film, stories, partnerships, education and mentorship Warrior Films is committed to serving an active role in educating, engaging, and empowering youth, families, and communities everywhere.

We hope you will support our latest project, Rites of Passage. This film fits beautifully with our mission, informing parents, teachers, coaches, counselors, politicians and others about rites of passage (ROP) work and the meaningful and positive impact they have on young people, their families, and their communities. This film resonates deeply for me; I myself was a troubled teen, unconsciously desperate for male mentors and for initiation, searching for answers in drugs and alcohol and reckless behavior.

Rites of Passage documents what positive rites of passage and mentorship programs can offer and clarifies their importance in the everyday lives of youth everywhere. Your continuing support will allow us to release a 6-10 minute version of the Rites of Passage film in January, along with a six-part curriculum to help direct our viewers’ action.

To fund the short film’s completion and release, we’re raising $30,000 by December 31st. In addition to the film, the funds will enable us to complete toolkits designed for various end users (colleges and universities, high schools, youth development agencies, community groups, psychologists, therapists, counselors, and parents).

Help us make this film a reality by sending your tax-deductible donation to Warrior Films, 41 Fairmount Ave., Oakland, CA, 94611, or click here online.

Thank you for your commitment to support social change through social-profit filmmaking. Together we will truly Bear Witness and Create Change.

With love and gratitude,

Frederick Marx

Producer/Director

  • P.S. ** Want to help spread the word? Our goal is to get 100 youth mentoring and rite of passage organizations to sign our project endorsement letter.  We already have 45 organizations!  If you and your organization would like to sign simply let us know and we'll add your namesContact Ishtar@warriorfilms.org.

 

Saturday
Sep202014

February 2014 Newsletter

 
September 2014
wf2home
 

Dear friends,

 

FM, James, & AgeesIt was really great to be back at the Sundance Film Festival after so many years.  The UCLA Film Archive unveiled a "restored" HD Hoop Dreams master which was actually an improvement from our original Beta video tapes.  I myself hadn't seen the film for at least ten years. 

I was delighted to see how little it had dated.  The NBA stars of the early 90s are mostly long gone and of course everybody has cell phones now.  But the story just takes over and sweeps you away with the same nail-biting drama, hope, and heartache as ever.  For me personally, watching the film was like visiting again with family I loved but hadn't seen for many years.  That was underscored by having both Arthur and Sheila Agee join us (above).  It seemed like our connection hadn't missed a beat.  

Journey from Zanskar will soon be available on I-Tunes.  Before Sundance, I had the sweet opportunity to screen it at the wonderful Waimea Ocean Film Festival in Hawaii.  If you'd like to see it on Netflix please call them at 866-716-0414 and request it. (Crazy as it may sound, there's no way to recommend a film online.) 

We're going into production on Rites of Passage: Mentoring the Future.  We hope to start shooting our first mentor/mentee story in Oakland in March.  I'll also be giving a talk on youth rites of passage to the Los Altos, CA, Rotary Club on March 27.  (The flyer is attached.)  I'm open to giving talks like these anytime, anywhere.

We're growing our Board again.  So if the work we're doing calls to you, please contact us at info@warriorfilms.org and let us know.  We welcome dedicated, inspired partners worldwide.

If you have a small to medium size business I'd like to encourage you to switch to Ethix.com as your credit card services provider.  Mha Atma Khalsa uses Ethix.com for his Los Angeles based Chiropractic Clinic.  "It was simple to make the change," he says.  "I love it because it's supporting Frederick's work without costing me a penny.  In fact, it's actually saving me money!"  Ethix.com

Still on mission...

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Saturday
Sep202014

July 2014 Newsletter

  September 2014
 
 

Dear friends,

The good work continues...

We started filming a couple "year in the life of a teen" stories.  We captured two very different 18 year olds experiencing Melissa Michael's wonderful "Surfing the Creative" rite of passage.  Over the coming months we'll see how they integrate the lessons they learned into their everyday lives.

Please join us for an upcoming talk or fundraiser:

  • Oakland Rotary Club, Aug. 28
  • Chicago, Sept. 18
  • Silicon Valley, Los Altos, Sept. 28
  • Big Island, Hawaii, October
  • North & South Carolina, November

You can choose Warrior Films as a donor to receive 0.5% of your purchases from Amazon.com when you start here: http://smile.amazon.com.  Speaking of Amazon, if you're a fan of Journey from Zanskar you might want to take a moment to share your feelings about the film with their customers here.  A couple pretty cynical people wrote some very negative things about it.

in gratitude for who you are,

 

p.s. Do not reply to this email, as it's an unmonitored email address. To reach out to us, please use this address: contact@warriorfilms.org.

Foreword

Men are made, not born.  We tend to think in this society when a male reaches 18 or 21, graduates high school or college, has that first drink or sexual experience, drives a car or joins the army, or worse, robs or steals, rapes a woman or takes a daredevil risk, beats up a “sissy” or shoots someone, that he is now miraculously a man.  These and related notions are some of the most pernicious yet commonplace in our society today.  The repercussions of this ignorance could not be more far reaching.  They are everywhere to behold.  We live in an age where suspended adolescence seems to be the norm for all too many men, most notably among men in positions of power.

Indigenous cultures knew better.  For them there was no such thing as adolescence.  You were either a child or an adult.  To mark that threshold, to perform and accomplish that transformation, was a function of the village itself.  It was a cultural obligation. Biology alone would not do it.  Village elders, both men and women, accepted the responsibility their ancestors entrusted them with.  The African proverb summarizes this neatly: “If we do not initiate the young they will burn down the village to feel the heat.”  

But how can we even aspire to universal values of mature masculinity when we inhabit a world so varied by culture, race, class, religion, nationality, sexual preference, age, and more?  I believe we can, as do Doctors Seymour, Smith, and Torres.  The key of course is not to ignore difference or go around it, but to go through difference.  Once we acknowledge and name our deep and significant differences we can begin to open our hearts to what unites us as men, not in spite of but because of those differences, what makes it possible to proudly and without exaggeration recognize ourselves as brothers.  “Brothers from another mother,” as some put it.  Or, as Asa Baber wrote:

Each man is my Father
Each man is my Brother
Each man is my Son

Each man is my Leader
Each man is my Teacher
Each man is my Mirror

I will always remember it
I will always honor it
I will always accept it

My pledge is to men
To their safety and growth

My work is for men
And life is my goal

This is the invitation and promise that these three men hold open to us.  The rawness and pain reflected in their own shared stories is the portal.  They model for us the road men must walk.  Into the grief, into the shadows, into the truth and acceptance.  But the promise of living life happier, more fulfilled, more connected and at peace is what lies in wait if only men have the courage to accept. 

It is one of the most significant invitations of our time.  If you’re a man reading these words I trust you have already said yes.  If you’re a woman reading these words I trust you’ll take them to heart for the men in your life.  Welcome.

Frederick Marx

RitesofPassageMovie.com

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Friday
Sep052014

Talk to Oakland Rotary Club 8/28/14

 

Sunday
Jul132014

Roger (Ebert) and Me

 

Whenever I would see him I used to tell Roger Ebert, only half kiddingly, that as long as he was alive I still had a film career.

He was a tireless promoter of Hoop Dreams.  In an effort led by him and Gene Siskel, the Chicago film critics awarded it “Best Film of the Year” in 1994, not best documentary, beating out Forest Gump, Pulp Fiction, and many others.  Along with our distribution company Fine Line Features, Ebert and Siskel spearheaded an effort to have AMPAS (the Oscars) nominate it as Best Film of the Year.  Then, when the film wasn’t nominated as Best Film or even as Best Documentary, they devoted two of their TV shows and many print columns in their respective newspapers to the outrage.  They talked about it on TV shows, in public appearances, at festivals, and in magazines wherever they went.

After Siskel died Ebert continued right on.  In a 1999 show with Martin Scorsese, he named it the “Best Film of the Decade.”  He took to calling it “the great American documentary.”  I believe part of why the film was recently selected by the US Library of Congress as a National Film Landmark, and chosen by members of the International Documentary Association as the “Best Documentary of all Time” was because of the attention he brought it. 

Roger truly loved the film.  Certainly, he had plenty of good reasons for going out of his way to support it.  It was a Chicago product and he was proud of his adopted city.  Our production company Kartemquin Films had been producing quality documentaries originating there since the mid-1960s.  Roger certainly knew them and their work.  The film also had the appeal of being an underdog story.  We were the little film crew that could, working with a minimal budget, a small “i” independent film, that came out of nowhere to take the country by storm, shot on video no less.  Roger liked underdog stories.  The film also highlighted the plight of low income, urban African-Americans.  Roger was married by that time to an African-American woman who might’ve played no small part in raising his awareness of African-American social issues.  But his own social conscience already ran deep.  That in itself may have been a decisive factor.   Certainly he had many good reasons to go out of his way to support our little film.  Not least of which is the fact that he simply believed it to be a great film.

But still I wonder if my long deceased father didn’t also figure in.  When I first met Roger in Sept. 1994 over dinner at the Toronto Film Festival I finally got to ask him about stories my Mom had told me for years.  “Roger used to toddle along after us following campus film screenings when we went to the campus Union for coffee and discussions,” she’d say. 

“Is it true what my Mom used to tell me about you and my Dad?” I asked.

“Who’s your Dad?” he said. 

“Werner Marx.” 

“You’re the son of Werner Marx?” 

“Yes. 

“Sit down.  I want to tell you a story.”

We sat.  Roger proceeded to tell me how my Dad helped him understand how much films could mean, effectively starting him down the road to becoming a film critic.  I had no idea.  He not only confirmed my mother’s stories, he detailed what an influence my father had been on his career. At that time in the early 1960s my Dad was an Assistant Professor of German at the University of Illinois, Urbana.  He also co-founded the university’s first film club – the Foreign Cinema Series.  Roger was an undergraduate student, attending his hometown school, “following his bliss” (as Joseph Campbell put it) by watching movies.

In many ways I followed in Roger’s footsteps.  I too went to my hometown university.  I too was profoundly impacted by the Foreign Cinema Club.  I too watched as many campus films as I could, eventually graduating with a major in film history, theory, and criticism - not offered in Roger’s day - having taken over 60 hours of film classes in over ten different university departments.  I still remember seeing Bergman’s Persona during the summer cinema series when I was only 15.  I walked out of Lincoln Hall stunned.  I had no clue what I had just witnessed, what the film had actually meant, but I knew I had been deeply and viscerally impacted.  To this day I return to that film again and again to absorb more of its profound mystery, beauty and horror.

Though he misremembered my Dad’s first name, Roger wrote about him in his book The Great Movies.  On page 253 he talks about the profound cipher that the film Last Year at Marienbad was for him.  (I don’t blame him.  For me, it’s one of the most inscrutable films ever made.)  Apparently, my Dad, in one of their post film, coffee fueled discussions, went on a tear positing the film as an illustration of Claude Levi-Strauss’ theories of anthropological archetypes.  Roger comments that he has no idea whether any of that was true; he never read Levi-Strauss.  But he goes on to say something lovely and true: The idea, I think, is that life is like this movie.  No matter how many theories you apply to it, life presses on indifferently to its own inscrutable ends.  The fun is in asking questions.  Answers are a form of defeat.  That rich observation reminds me of one of my favorite Vaclav Havel quotes: Run toward those asking questions.  Run away from those who say they have the answers.

Like Roger, I also wrote for the Daily Illini.  Though I was never editor like he was, I developed my craft at writing film reviews there, which quickly became my first career goal.  I can’t say that I wanted to be like Roger.  I can say that I was aware how he had built a career out of film criticism and that certainly struck me as a damn good life to have.

Years later, when I saw him at the Conference on World Affairs in Boulder and we spoke on panels together, or when he emailed me with an informal survey he was conducting about the future of film vs. video, I stupidly never picked his brain for further memories of my Dad.  He was one of the few living adults I knew who had known him.  Most had fallen out of my life, or died themselves, before I came of adult age.  Like many sons who lost their fathers too early, I thirsted for reflections of my Dad, never intuiting how much I needed it.  He was totally off my conscious radar while deeply inhabiting my unconscious.  I deeply regret never asking Roger to open up more fully on the subject of him. 

Following our Toronto meeting, I did send him a copy of the short documentary I made in graduate school about my Dad.  Maybe I never followed up.  Maybe I followed up and Roger never responded.  I don’t recall now.  But he never mentioned the film, even when we met in later years.  It’s entirely possible he didn’t like it.  Perhaps he felt uncomfortable in learning about my father’s political past.  Maybe it clouded or complicated his own warm memories of Dad.  I don’t know.  That not knowing is a sadness and a mystery for me.

It was a gift of an astonishing sort last March when I discovered two things Roger had written about Dad.  I found them while going through my mother’s belongings after she died.  Unbeknownst to my brother and sister and me, for almost 50 years she kept a bag full of letters she received following my Dad's death.  In that bag was a tribute article Roger had written in the Daily Illini commemorating him.  And among the almost 200 cards and letters was a hand-written letter from Roger to my Mom.  Both of these you can read below.

Life is so strange!  Odd mysteries, bewildering losses, unexpected gifts... all arrive with surprising fullness.  Full of admiration and warmth, Roger wrote movingly about what Dad meant to him.  In a perfect reminder of “spot it, you got it” – a maxim of my men’s work that reminds us that the qualities we admire in others are often those we ourselves carry – Roger celebrates my Dad’s most human values – his love of laughter and ideas, his devotion to teaching and service, his informality, spontaneity, and affectionate camaraderie.

It is another great sadness for me that Roger never got to see my most recent film Journey from Zanskar.  I believe he would’ve loved it.  Maybe he would’ve championed it.  Who knows?  Maybe he would’ve shown it at EbertFest – his eponymous film festival held at the Virginia Theater in Champaign where I myself used to watch many a blockbuster as a kid.  Maybe he would’ve seized on the story’s strange parallels to Hoop Dreams like another fine writer Pico Iyer did. 

 I haven’t yet seen Steve James’ film about Roger Life Itself.  I’m sure it’s wonderful.  For me, Roger’s death is mixed in with my Dad’s and my Mom’s.  Maybe the film will help me untie those mixed threads.  My fear is that it will somehow make it worse.

Like my Mom, like my Dad, Roger was a fine person who did what he could to show up and make a difference in the world.  He had much bigger venues for that than they did.  But he shared with them a love of moving images, of how art can shift culture, of appreciating a broad range of different people and ideas, of forming bonds over food and storytelling, of knowing attention paid to one person is as crucial as 100, of accepting humans in all their complexities and contradictions, of never forgetting the forgotten, of living life in its fullness… of life itself.   I miss him.